Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 996124 times)

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2625 on: December 07, 2015, 09:01:35 AM »
Read the entire article and couldn't find where the Department covered for the cop who raped her....

That is the title of the original article. The article mentions that a deputy who is also the president of a local police guild informed a cop suspect that he was about to be investigated and that a warrant was being prepared (among other things).

Perhaps this title is more to your liking:

Spokane Police Guild president has been criminally charged
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2015/dec/04/police-guild-president-has-been-criminally-charged

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2626 on: December 07, 2015, 10:32:57 AM »
That is the title of the original article. The article mentions that a deputy who is also the president of a local police guild informed a cop suspect that he was about to be investigated and that a warrant was being prepared (among other things).

Perhaps this title is more to your liking:

Spokane Police Guild president has been criminally charged
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2015/dec/04/police-guild-president-has-been-criminally-charged

Yes, that one appears to be accurate

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2627 on: December 09, 2015, 12:26:48 PM »
Cops Pay $7K to Man they Attacked for Filming – Days Later, Charge Him Again for Same Incident


When you cross the police, they have virtually unlimited resources to come after you in every way they can -- Even when they are completely wrong.


Multnomah County, OR — Fred Marlow IV, 28, recorded a raid that was taking place on his street early one morning last September and was subsequently assaulted and arrested by police on the scene. Marlow was recording from his own property at a very safe distance from the police officers and was not interfering with their operation in any way. However, police became aggressive with him when he refused to obey their commands to go inside.

Eventually, last month, the case against Marlow was thrown out, and he was paid $7,500 if he agreed to not file any future lawsuits for police brutality and wrongful arrest. However, shortly after the settlement, just days later, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office decided to bring additional charges against him.

Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.

According to Marlow’s attorney, although he did settle with the city, the statute of limitations for his case is still open, meaning that it was still possible for the city to renew charges against him. However, the fact that he settled with them days before shows that they are using this legal loophole to avoid a lawsuit while still making Marlow’s life as difficult as possible.

The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.

On his fundraising page, Marlow pointed out that the “officers are not marked and are wearing military camo and carrying what appears to be fully automatic weapons. Is this safe to be carrying out such an extreme military procedure with bombs and machine guns right next to an apartment filled with woman and children as well as in between two schools.”

“This case from the beginning was totally bogus,” Marlow’s attorney Craig T. Johnson said.

“It’s a great expense and it’s really a frivolous case. … I see the DA’s office and the police talk about lack of money, and they’re dealing with this case like it’s a murder case,” Johnson added.

Ultimately, although it is still legal to film police, the police also believe that they have the right to order people around, and arrest anyone who disobeys them. So if a police officer orders someone to stop filming, filming effectively becomes illegal, at least in their eyes.

Tom Cleary, the senior deputy district attorney has argued that it is “dangerous” for people to disobey the police.

“Taking a look at this behavior, it is concerning not only for Mr. Marlow’s safety but for the safety of the community and the safety of the officers. I think that needs to be addressed. … It is important when a situation is unfolding that citizens follow the directions of police,” Cleary said.

Sadly, although Marlow recently received a settlement from the city, the money will now be spent on legal fees and to help with the expenses he has set up a fundraiser page.

Watch the video below and you decide if this warrants any charges against Marlow.


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-settlement-attacked-arrested-filming-police-charge-days/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2628 on: December 09, 2015, 12:32:51 PM »
Ex-police chief accused of DWI crash gets raise, nearly $260K, no criminal charges

The borough and its former police chief have reached a settlement that will allow the chief to retire following allegations that he drove while under the influence of alcohol, struck a parked car, and left the scene of a hit-and-run accident, according to a settlement agreement.

http://www.nj.com/somerset/index.ssf/2015/12/ex-police_chief_accused_of_dwi_crash_gets_raise_26.html

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2629 on: December 09, 2015, 12:35:44 PM »
"He feared for his life".

Cop Gets Off Scot-Free After Punting an Innocent, Compliant Man’s Head Like a Football on Video

Dover, DE – Officer Thomas Webster of the Dover Police Department was finally indicted last May for kicking a man in the face during a despicable act of police incompetence in August of 2013. The attack was captured on the dash camera on another officer’s car, which showed the victim, Latif Dickerson getting kicked in the face by Webster as he was complying with the officer’s orders.

Dover Police Lt. Jason Pires said that the department chose to release the video immediately after the indictment to “control the narrative,” after keeping it secret for nearly two years.

“We released the video because the judge considered it no longer to be confidential. We’re a very transparent police department, and we feel that we handled this situation properly,“ Pires said.

In the attack, Dickerson was knocked out and had his jaw broken despite never being guilty of committing any crime. Dickerson just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was on his knees with his hands on the ground when Webster delivered the jaw-shattering kick, leaving him unconscious.

The case was taken before a grand jury in 2014, but Webster was not indicted. The case was reopened, however, when the Delaware Attorney General’s office took it before a second grand jury, who charged him with assault.

“We believe that the video demonstrates the need for large-scale reform of the Dover Police Department, specifically improvements to their use of force and internal affairs practices, and supervision of their officers. The people of Dover have a right to know about this incident and deserve a dialogue with law enforcement about how they can create a safe and equitable Dover community for all.” Kathleen MacRae, executive director of the ACLU of Delaware, said.

Webster’s defense during the trial was nothing short of laughable, yet, somehow, it worked.

“I wasn’t intending to kick him in the head. I was intending to kick him in the body,” Webster testified to the grand jury. He then claimed that he was in “fear for his life,” because they were looking for an armed black man with a yellow shirt and their incompetence led them to an innocent unarmed black man with a yellow hat instead.

The jury bought this ridiculous excuse for severely injuring an innocent man, whose only fault was to cross paths with this abusive tyrant. After a deliberation that lasted over three days, on Tuesday, the jury found Webster not guilty on both felony and misdemeanor charges of assault.

“This obviously was a thoughtful verdict. I hope we can all move on from this,” James Liguori, Webster’s lawyer, told reporters before hugging his client.

Although the department hasn’t made a public statement about whether or not Webster will be allowed back on the force, this acquittal essentially guarantees that he will.

The federal civil rights lawsuit filed for Dickerson has been resolved, but no details were forthcoming from Richard Morse, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who spoke with AP.

The video below is hard to watch as it shows how armed agents of the state can brutally assault an innocent man and do so with impunity. Notice at the end of the video how they realize, only after severely injuring Dickerson, that their other officers had located the actual suspect in a yellow shirt.


Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-scot-free-punting-innocent-compliant-mans-head-football-video/

1:00


illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2630 on: December 09, 2015, 04:59:23 PM »
Cops Pay $7K to Man they Attacked for Filming – Days Later, Charge Him Again for Same Incident


When you cross the police, they have virtually unlimited resources to come after you in every way they can -- Even when they are completely wrong.


Multnomah County, OR — Fred Marlow IV, 28, recorded a raid that was taking place on his street early one morning last September and was subsequently assaulted and arrested by police on the scene. Marlow was recording from his own property at a very safe distance from the police officers and was not interfering with their operation in any way. However, police became aggressive with him when he refused to obey their commands to go inside.

Eventually, last month, the case against Marlow was thrown out, and he was paid $7,500 if he agreed to not file any future lawsuits for police brutality and wrongful arrest. However, shortly after the settlement, just days later, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office decided to bring additional charges against him.

Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.

According to Marlow’s attorney, although he did settle with the city, the statute of limitations for his case is still open, meaning that it was still possible for the city to renew charges against him. However, the fact that he settled with them days before shows that they are using this legal loophole to avoid a lawsuit while still making Marlow’s life as difficult as possible.

The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.

On his fundraising page, Marlow pointed out that the “officers are not marked and are wearing military camo and carrying what appears to be fully automatic weapons. Is this safe to be carrying out such an extreme military procedure with bombs and machine guns right next to an apartment filled with woman and children as well as in between two schools.”

“This case from the beginning was totally bogus,” Marlow’s attorney Craig T. Johnson said.

“It’s a great expense and it’s really a frivolous case. … I see the DA’s office and the police talk about lack of money, and they’re dealing with this case like it’s a murder case,” Johnson added.

Ultimately, although it is still legal to film police, the police also believe that they have the right to order people around, and arrest anyone who disobeys them. So if a police officer orders someone to stop filming, filming effectively becomes illegal, at least in their eyes.

Tom Cleary, the senior deputy district attorney has argued that it is “dangerous” for people to disobey the police.

“Taking a look at this behavior, it is concerning not only for Mr. Marlow’s safety but for the safety of the community and the safety of the officers. I think that needs to be addressed. … It is important when a situation is unfolding that citizens follow the directions of police,” Cleary said.

Sadly, although Marlow recently received a settlement from the city, the money will now be spent on legal fees and to help with the expenses he has set up a fundraiser page.

Watch the video below and you decide if this warrants any charges against Marlow.


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-settlement-attacked-arrested-filming-police-charge-days/








Seriously what the Fcuk is it with these Cops.
Dressed in military type clothes.
And no one must film or question us.

It's endorsed behaviour from some Dictator run
Banana Republic.
This is meant to be Modern American Policing.
 ::)

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2631 on: December 10, 2015, 07:43:42 AM »
Cops Pay $7K to Man they Attacked for Filming – Days Later, Charge Him Again for Same Incident


When you cross the police, they have virtually unlimited resources to come after you in every way they can -- Even when they are completely wrong.


Multnomah County, OR — Fred Marlow IV, 28, recorded a raid that was taking place on his street early one morning last September and was subsequently assaulted and arrested by police on the scene. Marlow was recording from his own property at a very safe distance from the police officers and was not interfering with their operation in any way. However, police became aggressive with him when he refused to obey their commands to go inside.

Eventually, last month, the case against Marlow was thrown out, and he was paid $7,500 if he agreed to not file any future lawsuits for police brutality and wrongful arrest. However, shortly after the settlement, just days later, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office decided to bring additional charges against him.

Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.

According to Marlow’s attorney, although he did settle with the city, the statute of limitations for his case is still open, meaning that it was still possible for the city to renew charges against him. However, the fact that he settled with them days before shows that they are using this legal loophole to avoid a lawsuit while still making Marlow’s life as difficult as possible.

The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.

On his fundraising page, Marlow pointed out that the “officers are not marked and are wearing military camo and carrying what appears to be fully automatic weapons. Is this safe to be carrying out such an extreme military procedure with bombs and machine guns right next to an apartment filled with woman and children as well as in between two schools.”

“This case from the beginning was totally bogus,” Marlow’s attorney Craig T. Johnson said.

“It’s a great expense and it’s really a frivolous case. … I see the DA’s office and the police talk about lack of money, and they’re dealing with this case like it’s a murder case,” Johnson added.

Ultimately, although it is still legal to film police, the police also believe that they have the right to order people around, and arrest anyone who disobeys them. So if a police officer orders someone to stop filming, filming effectively becomes illegal, at least in their eyes.

Tom Cleary, the senior deputy district attorney has argued that it is “dangerous” for people to disobey the police.

“Taking a look at this behavior, it is concerning not only for Mr. Marlow’s safety but for the safety of the community and the safety of the officers. I think that needs to be addressed. … It is important when a situation is unfolding that citizens follow the directions of police,” Cleary said.

Sadly, although Marlow recently received a settlement from the city, the money will now be spent on legal fees and to help with the expenses he has set up a fundraiser page.

Watch the video below and you decide if this warrants any charges against Marlow.


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/man-settlement-attacked-arrested-filming-police-charge-days/

The video that Marlow took was extremely creepy and showed police in camouflage riot gear and massive tanks. The police were telling people to stay inside and “away from their windows” during the raid.
 ::)

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2632 on: December 10, 2015, 07:55:08 AM »
Ex-police chief accused of DWI crash gets raise, nearly $260K, no criminal charges

The borough and its former police chief have reached a settlement that will allow the chief to retire following allegations that he drove while under the influence of alcohol, struck a parked car, and left the scene of a hit-and-run accident, according to a settlement agreement.

http://www.nj.com/somerset/index.ssf/2015/12/ex-police_chief_accused_of_dwi_crash_gets_raise_26.html

Police Chiefs are usually hired and fired outside of civil service via contracts with the city. In this case, it appears the city worked out a deal with him to end his contract. As far as the DWI portion of the case, I've seen these circumstances more than once where a person makes it home and is contacted by Law Enforcement. It is almost impossible to get a DWI conviction as it can't be proven the person was intoxicated prior to reaching home. In this case the Chief said he had been drinking at home. No way to dispute that. Leaving the scene of a collision has it's own problems as no one saw who was driving at the time. It's a lower class Misdemeanor in many states if there are no injuries from the collision. The cops did the right thing in trying to hold him responsible.. apparently he is a none moral scumbag that believes it's okay to drive drunk and cause a collision and beat the system. I would like to know why the city didn't tell him to pound sand on the severance package   

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2633 on: December 10, 2015, 08:00:50 AM »
"He feared for his life".

Cop Gets Off Scot-Free After Punting an Innocent, Compliant Man’s Head Like a Football on Video

Dover, DE – Officer Thomas Webster of the Dover Police Department was finally indicted last May for kicking a man in the face during a despicable act of police incompetence in August of 2013. The attack was captured on the dash camera on another officer’s car, which showed the victim, Latif Dickerson getting kicked in the face by Webster as he was complying with the officer’s orders.

Dover Police Lt. Jason Pires said that the department chose to release the video immediately after the indictment to “control the narrative,” after keeping it secret for nearly two years.

“We released the video because the judge considered it no longer to be confidential. We’re a very transparent police department, and we feel that we handled this situation properly,“ Pires said.

In the attack, Dickerson was knocked out and had his jaw broken despite never being guilty of committing any crime. Dickerson just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was on his knees with his hands on the ground when Webster delivered the jaw-shattering kick, leaving him unconscious.

The case was taken before a grand jury in 2014, but Webster was not indicted. The case was reopened, however, when the Delaware Attorney General’s office took it before a second grand jury, who charged him with assault.

“We believe that the video demonstrates the need for large-scale reform of the Dover Police Department, specifically improvements to their use of force and internal affairs practices, and supervision of their officers. The people of Dover have a right to know about this incident and deserve a dialogue with law enforcement about how they can create a safe and equitable Dover community for all.” Kathleen MacRae, executive director of the ACLU of Delaware, said.

Webster’s defense during the trial was nothing short of laughable, yet, somehow, it worked.

“I wasn’t intending to kick him in the head. I was intending to kick him in the body,” Webster testified to the grand jury. He then claimed that he was in “fear for his life,” because they were looking for an armed black man with a yellow shirt and their incompetence led them to an innocent unarmed black man with a yellow hat instead.

The jury bought this ridiculous excuse for severely injuring an innocent man, whose only fault was to cross paths with this abusive tyrant. After a deliberation that lasted over three days, on Tuesday, the jury found Webster not guilty on both felony and misdemeanor charges of assault.

“This obviously was a thoughtful verdict. I hope we can all move on from this,” James Liguori, Webster’s lawyer, told reporters before hugging his client.

Although the department hasn’t made a public statement about whether or not Webster will be allowed back on the force, this acquittal essentially guarantees that he will.

The federal civil rights lawsuit filed for Dickerson has been resolved, but no details were forthcoming from Richard Morse, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who spoke with AP.

The video below is hard to watch as it shows how armed agents of the state can brutally assault an innocent man and do so with impunity. Notice at the end of the video how they realize, only after severely injuring Dickerson, that their other officers had located the actual suspect in a yellow shirt.


Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-scot-free-punting-innocent-compliant-mans-head-football-video/

1:00




Looked like excessive force to me

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2634 on: December 10, 2015, 11:32:54 AM »

Looked like excessive force to me

Looked like assault to me.

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2635 on: December 10, 2015, 11:41:57 AM »

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2636 on: December 10, 2015, 11:04:04 PM »
“I’m going to rape your f*****g mother” NY Police Chief Finally Arrested for Brutal Act of Torture



Suffolk County, NY — James Burke, formerly the Chief of one of the largest police departments in the country, found himself handcuffed and facing federal civil rights charges on December 9th, reports the New York Times. Burke’s arrest follows a lengthy investigation into allegations of torture, assault, subornation of perjury, and corruption in a case involving convicted thief Christopher Loeb. The confessed larcenist’s illicit haul included a duffel bag containing some of Burke’s property, including handguns, ammunition, mace, and what Loeb described as a stash of “nasty porn” and “sex toys.”

In 2012, Loeb was charged with breaking into several cars in Saint James, Long Island. One of the cars belonged to then-Chief Burke, who personally arrested Loeb and took him to the Suffolk County Fourth County Precinct. After attaching his handcuffs to a six-inch chain anchored in the floor of his cell, four officers took turns beating the suspect for about fifteen minutes before Burke entered the room and took over from where they had left off.

Chief Burke “grabbed me by my cheeks,” Loeb recalled. “He took his thumb and four fingers and squeezed my face [then] he punched me right above my hairline.” According to prosecutors, Burke beat the captive so severely that at one point detectives in the room begged him to “knock it off.”

Burke cared not about Loeb’s desperate plea for an attorney. Loeb recalled that the Chief gloatingly told him that “no one will ever f*****g believe me because I’m a convicted felon and a dope head.” After Loeb, referring to the stash of porn and sex toys, complained that the Chief was a “pervert,” Burke gave full rein to his rage — first threatening to murder Loeb through a “hot shot” — a lethal dose of heroin — and then escalating the abuse to potentially lethal torture.

“Have you ever been choked out before?” Burke taunted the bleeding and traumatized suspect, according to Loeb’s testimony in a federal preliminary hearing last month. The Chief then applied a chokehold, whispering in Loeb’s ear: “I’m going to rape your f*****g mother.”

“That’s the last thing I remember,” Loeb testified. “I passed out.”

After a civil rights inquiry was opened into Loeb’s allegations, Burke brow-beat the officers who had been involved in the December 2012 incident to lie to federal investigators. He also induced one of the detectives to perjure himself on the witness stand during Loeb’s pre-trial hearing by denying that Burke had assaulted the suspect while in custody.

Much of the conversation between Burke and Loeb, prior to the latter being rendered unconscious, focused on the “nasty porn” that was in the stolen duffel bag. The testimony of an officer who searched Loeb’s home confirmed that a stolen duffel bag had been recovered during a search, but the pornography wasn’t placed into evidence.

Possession of conventional pornography — moral objections to its content aside – is not a crime. Chief Burke’s background suggests that he might have cause for concern about his preferred vices.

In 1995, then-Sergeant James Burke was romantically involved with a convicted prostitute and drug dealer named Lowrita Rickenbacker. She had been repeatedly arrested in the precinct over which Burke presided, but during an internal affairs inquiry, Burke insisted that he had no knowledge of her criminal record.

Investigators determined that Burke had engaged in sex acts with the prostitute in his patrol car, and on one occasion left her alone in the vehicle with his gun and service weapon, according to Pix11 News.

No discipline resulted from the years-long internal affairs probe into Burke’s misconduct. Instead, in 2000, he was promoted to Lieutenant, before being named chief of detectives in 2002 and rising to become Suffolk County Police Chief ten years later. This happened despite the fact that “everybody knew he’s a bad guy,” according to former NYPD detective and Suffolk County resident Peter Fiorillo. “They [Suffolk County police officials] wanted to do something [about Burke’s corruption and abuse of power] and it never worked, because he’s too connected.”

Burke’s powerful partisans continued the pretense that he was an honorable public servant even after he was compelled to resign in October.
In keeping with the familiar convention, Burke claimed that his resignation was for “personal and family reasons,” rather than the accumulating allegations of criminal misconduct. His attorney insisted that the sudden retirement at the end of “a stellar and courageous career” was “unrelated to any speculation of a federal investigation.”

Police Commissioner Edward Webber struck a similarly unconvincing pose.

“Chief of Department James C. Burke … is one of the most outstanding supervisors, investigators, and trainers in the history of the Suffolk County Police Department,” pretended Webber in a press release following the Chief’s resignation. “I thank him for his many years of dedicated service to the people of Suffolk County.”

Burke’s abuse of power in the service of his own interests led to federal charges of assault and obstructing a civil rights investigation. Two other officers involved in the conspiracy, Criminal Intelligence detectives Anthony Leto and Kenneth Bombace, have resigned, as well. There’s reason to suspect that the corruption has metastasized too deeply to be cured through the surgical removal of one abusive chief and two sycophantic detectives: “The potential for indictments in Suffolk County could go high up the masthead, according to sources knowledgeable of the investigation,” reported Pix11 News.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/im-rape-fg-mother-ny-police-chief-finally-arrested-brutal-act-torture

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/10/nyregion/james-burke-former-suffolk-county-police-chief-is-arrested.html

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2637 on: December 11, 2015, 07:42:52 AM »
Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.


The cost to litigate a case, even if an officer is totally justified is several times more than 7K. It was a strategic move to settle the lawsuit out of court for the 7K, saving a substantial amount of time and money, then continue with the original charges and let the courts determine if there is substance to the allegation

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2638 on: December 11, 2015, 07:49:01 AM »
“I’m going to rape your f*****g mother” NY Police Chief Finally Arrested for Brutal Act of Torture



Suffolk County, NY — James Burke, formerly the Chief of one of the largest police departments in the country, found himself handcuffed and facing federal civil rights charges on December 9th, reports the New York Times. Burke’s arrest follows a lengthy investigation into allegations of torture, assault, subornation of perjury, and corruption in a case involving convicted thief Christopher Loeb. The confessed larcenist’s illicit haul included a duffel bag containing some of Burke’s property, including handguns, ammunition, mace, and what Loeb described as a stash of “nasty porn” and “sex toys.”

In 2012, Loeb was charged with breaking into several cars in Saint James, Long Island. One of the cars belonged to then-Chief Burke, who personally arrested Loeb and took him to the Suffolk County Fourth County Precinct. After attaching his handcuffs to a six-inch chain anchored in the floor of his cell, four officers took turns beating the suspect for about fifteen minutes before Burke entered the room and took over from where they had left off.

Chief Burke “grabbed me by my cheeks,” Loeb recalled. “He took his thumb and four fingers and squeezed my face [then] he punched me right above my hairline.” According to prosecutors, Burke beat the captive so severely that at one point detectives in the room begged him to “knock it off.”

Burke cared not about Loeb’s desperate plea for an attorney. Loeb recalled that the Chief gloatingly told him that “no one will ever f*****g believe me because I’m a convicted felon and a dope head.” After Loeb, referring to the stash of porn and sex toys, complained that the Chief was a “pervert,” Burke gave full rein to his rage — first threatening to murder Loeb through a “hot shot” — a lethal dose of heroin — and then escalating the abuse to potentially lethal torture.

“Have you ever been choked out before?” Burke taunted the bleeding and traumatized suspect, according to Loeb’s testimony in a federal preliminary hearing last month. The Chief then applied a chokehold, whispering in Loeb’s ear: “I’m going to rape your f*****g mother.”

“That’s the last thing I remember,” Loeb testified. “I passed out.”

After a civil rights inquiry was opened into Loeb’s allegations, Burke brow-beat the officers who had been involved in the December 2012 incident to lie to federal investigators. He also induced one of the detectives to perjure himself on the witness stand during Loeb’s pre-trial hearing by denying that Burke had assaulted the suspect while in custody.

Much of the conversation between Burke and Loeb, prior to the latter being rendered unconscious, focused on the “nasty porn” that was in the stolen duffel bag. The testimony of an officer who searched Loeb’s home confirmed that a stolen duffel bag had been recovered during a search, but the pornography wasn’t placed into evidence.

Possession of conventional pornography — moral objections to its content aside – is not a crime. Chief Burke’s background suggests that he might have cause for concern about his preferred vices.

In 1995, then-Sergeant James Burke was romantically involved with a convicted prostitute and drug dealer named Lowrita Rickenbacker. She had been repeatedly arrested in the precinct over which Burke presided, but during an internal affairs inquiry, Burke insisted that he had no knowledge of her criminal record.

Investigators determined that Burke had engaged in sex acts with the prostitute in his patrol car, and on one occasion left her alone in the vehicle with his gun and service weapon, according to Pix11 News.

No discipline resulted from the years-long internal affairs probe into Burke’s misconduct. Instead, in 2000, he was promoted to Lieutenant, before being named chief of detectives in 2002 and rising to become Suffolk County Police Chief ten years later. This happened despite the fact that “everybody knew he’s a bad guy,” according to former NYPD detective and Suffolk County resident Peter Fiorillo. “They [Suffolk County police officials] wanted to do something [about Burke’s corruption and abuse of power] and it never worked, because he’s too connected.”

Burke’s powerful partisans continued the pretense that he was an honorable public servant even after he was compelled to resign in October.
In keeping with the familiar convention, Burke claimed that his resignation was for “personal and family reasons,” rather than the accumulating allegations of criminal misconduct. His attorney insisted that the sudden retirement at the end of “a stellar and courageous career” was “unrelated to any speculation of a federal investigation.”

Police Commissioner Edward Webber struck a similarly unconvincing pose.

“Chief of Department James C. Burke … is one of the most outstanding supervisors, investigators, and trainers in the history of the Suffolk County Police Department,” pretended Webber in a press release following the Chief’s resignation. “I thank him for his many years of dedicated service to the people of Suffolk County.”

Burke’s abuse of power in the service of his own interests led to federal charges of assault and obstructing a civil rights investigation. Two other officers involved in the conspiracy, Criminal Intelligence detectives Anthony Leto and Kenneth Bombace, have resigned, as well. There’s reason to suspect that the corruption has metastasized too deeply to be cured through the surgical removal of one abusive chief and two sycophantic detectives: “The potential for indictments in Suffolk County could go high up the masthead, according to sources knowledgeable of the investigation,” reported Pix11 News.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/im-rape-fg-mother-ny-police-chief-finally-arrested-brutal-act-torture

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/10/nyregion/james-burke-former-suffolk-county-police-chief-is-arrested.html

It's refreshing to see that even a police chief and those who he got to lie for him is being held accountable. Wouldn't likely see that a couple decades ago

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2639 on: December 11, 2015, 09:19:30 AM »
No marches or protests for the killing of an innocent 6 year old child..

Two marshals are charged with murder in shooting death of 6-year-old Louisiana boy who was strapped into front seat of his father's car

Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse Jr. are charged with one count each of second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder
Police say Stafford and Greenhouse were moonlighting as deputy city marshals in Marksville on the night of Nov. 3
They fired at least 18 rounds at a car driven by Chris Few, police say
The shooting severely wounded Few and killed his son, Jeremy Mardis

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3354980/Grandmother-boy-killed-police-shooting-Release-video.html

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2640 on: December 11, 2015, 09:28:00 AM »
Cops Shoots Unarmed Man on Video, for No Reason then Covers it Up and Won’t be Charged

Hopefully, this new means of police claiming they "accidentally" shot an unarmed man, does not become a trend of how cops escape charges.

Paradise, CA — Andrew Thomas, 26, made a deadly decision to get behind the wheel after he’d been drinking on Thanksgiving night. With his 23-year-old wife, Darien Ehorn in the passenger’s seat, Thomas left the Canteena Bar and was immediately pursued by Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster.

In a pursuit that barely lasted a minute, Thomas loses control of his Toyota Four-Runner, hit the median and flipped over. Tragically, Ehorn was ejected from the vehicle and died on the scene.

Officer Feaster then gets out of his vehicle, gun drawn, and as Thomas attempts to get out of the vehicle, in a likely attempt to check on his wife, the cop shoots him in the neck.

Thomas posed absolutely no threat to the officer who was 10-20 feet away from Thomas when he fired. There was no possible way the department could spin the shooting into Feaster somehow fearing for his life. So, they did something entirely different.

They claimed it was an accident.

Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey announced on Tuesday that Feaster would not face any charges, claiming that Feaster’s gun merely “went off” when it struck Thomas in the neck, hitting him in the C7 and T1 vertebrae, which will likely mean he will never walk again.

If this truly were an accidental shooting, Feaster would have probably reported firing his gun. However, that didn’ happen.

When backup arrived on the scene, Feaster said nothing of discharging his firearm. For 11 minutes, Thomas lay bleeding out in the vehicle before anyone even found the shot.

Only when the commanding officer on the scene suggested an investigator return to the Canteena to find out if Thomas had been shot at the bar did Feaster reveal he’d pulled the trigger.

According to Ramsey, there were multiple factors investigators used to determine the shooting to be accidental, conveniently igoring the fact that Feaster tried to cover it up.

Ramsey, in some weird play on words, said the evidence shows the shooting to be accidental, and possibly negligent, but not criminally so. “This shooting is not justified, but also not criminal.”

He then went on to describe things that are not at all present in the video, such as Feaster being “surprised by the gun’s firing.”

    “The dash cam video shows Officer Feaster was not prepared for and was surprised by the guns firing. The pistol discharges in mid-stride and the officer both flinches his head to the right and does a stutter step indicative of an officer not prepared for nor intentionally firing his pistol. Additionally, officers normally train to fire a minimum of two shots. There was no second shot and the officer immediately holstered his weapon after the discharge.”

The flinch and the step were not present, and, there was no need to fire a second shot as Thomas collapsed back into the vehicle immediately after the first one.

Thomas will certainly deserve the jail time that he gets for negligently killing his wife. But the bullet in his neck also warrants jail time. Unfortunately, because the person who put that bullet there wears a uniform and a badge, he will not see any.

Since the shooting, Feaster has been on paid administrative leave pending an ‘internal’ investigation. But, rest assured, since the DA decided not to file charges, there is no possible way that the department will.

Thomas, who had a blood alcohol concentration of .15, and who may never walk again, is expected to face driving under the influence and vehicular manslaughter charges.


whork

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2641 on: December 11, 2015, 12:11:14 PM »
Where are the conservatives in this thread.

They are always up in arms against government stepping over its limits.

Here you have the people who uphold the governments law killing people with impunity and nothing ??

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2642 on: December 11, 2015, 12:32:49 PM »
Marlow is now facing misdemeanor charges of interfering with police and resisting arrest and is scheduled to appear in court in February or March.

‘”Can you tell me how this is possible? They paid me to settle, and then they are trying to charge me with a crime again? I don’t get this justice system,” Marlow told The Oregonian.


The cost to litigate a case, even if an officer is totally justified is several times more than 7K. It was a strategic move to settle the lawsuit out of court for the 7K, saving a substantial amount of time and money, then continue with the original charges and let the courts determine if there is substance to the allegation

Yeah - he didn't understand what he was signing. He could try to get the settlement thrown out by arguing that the prosecution is malicious but it would be an uphill battle. Still one worth fighting, imo.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2643 on: December 11, 2015, 12:35:31 PM »
Where are the conservatives in this thread.

They are always up in arms against government stepping over its limits.

Here you have the people who uphold the governments law killing people with impunity and nothing ??

Conveniently absent (or silent), as are most cops and their supporters. The only exception is Agnostic007; even though I usually disagree with him, at least he discusses some of the stories here and offers his perspective.

avxo

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2644 on: December 11, 2015, 12:37:12 PM »
Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey announced on Tuesday that Feaster would not face any charges, claiming that Feaster’s gun merely “went off” when it struck Thomas in the neck, hitting him in the C7 and T1 vertebrae, which will likely mean he will never walk again.

Bad gun... bad, bad gun. Going off like that! Cop guns have a tendency to do that it seems. Must be a manufacturing defect, right? Good thing brave DAs like Mike Ramsey know that it's not itchy trigger fingers to blame and spares poor Officer Patrick Feaster the ignominy of a trial for, oh... I don't know...  involuntary manslaughter maybe?

Fucking disgusting...

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2645 on: December 11, 2015, 12:48:53 PM »
Bad gun... bad, bad gun. Going off like that! Cop guns have a tendency to do that it seems. Must be a manufacturing defect, right? Good thing brave DAs like Mike Ramsey know that it's not itchy trigger fingers to blame and spares poor Officer Patrick Feaster the ignominy of a trial for, oh... I don't know...  involuntary manslaughter maybe?

Fucking disgusting...

According to the article, the cop conveniently forgot to mention his weapon "discharged itself" (maybe the gun was looking at the bigmikecox wyhi thread). The other cops that arrived on scene probably couldn't imagine the cop shot this man (shouldn't they confiscate and check his gun?) and only when the supervisor asked someone to go to the bar to see if the man was shot there did the cop conveniently "remember".

No surprises about the DA also, unfortunately.

whork

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2646 on: December 11, 2015, 01:14:46 PM »
Conveniently absent (or silent), as are most cops and their supporters. The only exception is Agnostic007; even though I usually disagree with him, at least he discusses some of the stories here and offers his perspective.

Agnostic got balls.

In a thread like this (that for obvious reasons is anti-police) he is still contributing.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2647 on: December 12, 2015, 09:12:32 AM »
Sad. This happened in 2009...

Innocent Man Dies After Cop Smashed His Head into the Concrete – Cop Never Punished

An innocent Seattle man was killed by a cop, his death ruled a homicide, and the cop who did it never got a slap on the wrist.

Seattle, WA — An innocent man has died this week after being in a coma and on life support since he was brutally attacked by a Seattle cop.

On May 10, 2009, Christopher Harris was walking down the street when he noticed 2 men, dressed in all black, running after him. As anyone would do when threatened by two maniacs chasing after you, Harris ran.

When the maniacs, who happened to be King County sheriff’s deputies, caught up to Harris, one of them, Deputy Matthew Paul, threw the entire weight of his body into Harris, sending Harris’ head smashing into the concrete. Harris would never regain consciousness.

On Thursday, Harris finally succumbed to his injuries from that attack. According to the Thurston County Coroner’s Office, Harris died of “Acute and chronic pneumonia of the lungs, due to medical sequelae, due to blunt head trauma,” and his manner of death has been ruled a homicide.

Deputy Paul never received so much as a slap on the wrist for his brutal negligence. In spite of a $10 million settlement paid out to Harris’ family in 2011, Paul remained on the force and on full duty.

The department never even conducted an investigation into the matter.

In police state USA, a cop can kill a man, on video, and no one even bats an eye.

0:11


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-man-dies-cop-smashed-head-concrete-cop-punished/


According to this article, the cop was cleared by an internal investigation - no surprise:

http://q13fox.com/2015/12/11/christopher-harris-attorney-man-slammed-into-wall-by-deputy-in-2009-dies/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2648 on: December 15, 2015, 11:00:42 PM »
Only Cop Charged in Raid that Maimed a Baby is Acquitted – Police Still Blaming Toddler & Family



“How is America going to justify this?” exclaimed Bounkham Phonesavankh after a federal jury in Georgia acquitted the former sheriff’s deputy whose perjured affidavit precipitated a SWAT raid that nearly cost the life of his 19-month-old son.
“How can we explain this? I thought this country was built with the truth, and not a bunch of corruption and lying like this. I almost lost my life, my family, my son.”

Phonesavankh’s namesake son, known by the nickname Bou-Bou, was nearly burned to death in his sleep by a flash-bang grenade hurled into his crib during a 2:00 a.m. no-knock SWAT raid by the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office on their home in Cornelia in May 2014.

The search warrant used to justify that raid was filed by then-Deputy Nikki Austin, who claimed that a “true and reliable informant” had conducted a controlled buy of $50 worth of crystal meth at the home several hours earlier from a potentially dangerous repeat offender named Wanis Thonetheva. The affidavit characterized Thoneteheva as armed and potentially dangerous, and claimed that lookouts had been stationed at the home – elements that supposedly justified a militarized midnight raid on a home where children were known to reside.

Every critical element of Austin’s affidavit was either a conscious lie or a culpable misrepresentation. Her “true and reliable” informant began working with the Mountain Judicial Circuit Criminal Narcotics Investigation and Suppression Team the day before the nearly fatal SWAT raid on the Phonesavanh family, which means that he had not proven his reliability. He claimed to have attempted a drug buy while in the company of his wife and roommate, neither of whom was working with the task force, and it was the roommate – not the informant – who supposedly made the purchase. As Autry later testified in court, she wasn’t even the primary author of the affidavit, which was drafted by her supervisor.

During her trial, Autry maintained that she didn’t lie, while conceding that some of the information in the affidavit wasn’t “entirely” accurate.

Literally thousands of people are in federal prison because of genuinely trivial inaccuracies in stories they told federal investigators. As a member of the privileged enforcement caste, however, Autry was spared punishment because the applicable legal standard required the prosecution to demonstrate that she acted “willfully” and with “reckless disregard” for the truth – and, more importantly, the prosecution had to overcome the reflexive deference to law enforcement that characterizes American juries, especially at the federal level.

Alecia Phonesavankh, the mother of the still-recovering child, believes that Autry’s acquittal – like the grotesque display of military force in the terrifying home invasion raid — reflects deeply entrenched racial bias toward her Laotian husband, in-laws, and child.

“It’s obvious I was the only person untouched in that house when they raided it,” Alecia said through angry tears following the verdict. “Why? Because I’m white. Why do they target Laotians and not me? Because I’m white. Why did we get a not guilty verdict? Because she [former Deputy Austin] is white!”

Another possible explanation is found in the carefully designed mechanisms that diffuse responsibility and impede accountability. Within hours of the raid, while Bou-Bou was in a medically induced coma as doctors struggled to stitch his chest back together, Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell issued a statement exonerating his officers of all misconduct.
“I stand behind what our team did,” Terrell declared after consulting with the county DA’ s office and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. “There’s nothing to investigate, there’s nothing to look at. Bad things can happen. That’s just the world we live in.”

Public outrage eventually led to a Grand Jury inquest, which did little more than ratify the sheriff’s claims. Rather than preferring charges against the officials responsible for that crime, the grand jury suggested a handful of anodyne “reforms” and expressed satisfaction that the rouge task force that carried out the berserker raid has been subsumed into a state-wide counter-narcotics unit supervised by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

The grand jury’s “presentment” underwent exceptionally strenuous rhetorical contortions to apportion roughly equal amounts of blame to both the perpetrators and the victims of the atrocity committed against the Phonesavankh family.

“Nothing can be more difficult and heart-wrenching than injuries to one’s child,” the document asserts, before suggesting that inflicting such injuries can be just as traumatic as suffering them: “[W]e wish to extend our sympathy also to the law enforcement officers involved… [W]hat has not been seen before by others and talked or written about, is that these individuals are suffering as well.”

While admitting that the investigation that produced the search warrant affidavit was “hurried, sloppy, and unfortunately not in accordance with the best practices and procedures,” the Habersham County Grand Jury asserted that this wasn’t a case of “criminal negligence,” but simply a regrettable result of “well-intentioned people getting in too big a hurry, and not slowing down and taking enough time to consider the possible consequences of their actions.”

This isn’t to say that both parties were equally blameless. Page 13 of the Grand Jury’s presentment actually blames “the parents and extended family” of the victim, because they supposedly “had some degree of knowledge concerning family members involved in criminal activity that came in and out of the residence.”

The alleged target of the raid, Wanis Thonethevah, had been thrown out of the home three weeks earlier. Bou-Bou’s parents had relocated to Cornelia after their home in Wisconsin had burned down, and had nothing whatsoever to do with any alleged wrongdoing of their relative; they were simply desperate for a place to live. Their only role in this affair consisted of sleeping in a home that was targeted for a post-midnight military assault on the basis of a perjured affidavit.

In their reply to the Phonesavankh family’s lawsuit, the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office actually claimed that the “deliberate, criminal conduct of plaintiffs” – including the lead plaintiff, Bou-Bou – “supersedes any and all negligence or liability, if any, on the part of these defendants,” and that “plaintiffs’ damages, if any, were directly and proximately caused by the contributory and comparative negligence of plaintiffs and their failure to exercise ordinary care.”

How could Bou-Bou’s parents “exercise ordinary care” sufficient to prevent a team of militarized narcotics enforcers from breaking into their home and nearly murdering their 19-month-old infant in his sleep, on the basis of a perjured affidavit? Given that the primary victim was also the lead plaintiff, the reply filed by the Sheriff’s Office actually accuses him of “negligence” and “criminal conduct,” presumably for the felonious act of sleeping in a crib into which a privileged public servant would soon hurl a flash-bang grenade.

“Qualified immunity” protected Habersham County Sheriff’s Deputy Charles Long from legal consequences for blindly heaving that flash-bang grenade – a “destructive device,” as described by the ATF, that when detonated burns at 2,000-3,500 degrees Fahrenheit – into Bou-Bou’s crib. During Nikki Austin’s trial, defense attorney Michael Trost made what could be called an Oprah Winfrey argument on behalf of his client: Sheriff Terrell has qualified immunity; Deputy Long has qualified immunity; everybody gets qualified immunity!

“There’s a pattern of excess in the ways search warrants are executed,” Trost complained. “That’s what led to the injuries to this child.”
Because everybody was guilty of excess, in other words, nobody is to blame – except for the unprivileged victims of that institutionalized excess.

“I was doing my job,” Austin crowed after the verdict, as if expecting a commendation. Her “job” was one that required neither honesty nor accuracy, and involved no personal accountability for the crimes committed against an infant who will endure years of expensive surgeries and remain disfigured for life.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-charged-raid-maimed-baby-acquitted-police-blaming-toddler-family/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2649 on: December 16, 2015, 06:08:53 AM »
Cops Shoots Unarmed Man on Video, for No Reason then Covers it Up and Won’t be Charged

Hopefully, this new means of police claiming they "accidentally" shot an unarmed man, does not become a trend of how cops escape charges.

Paradise, CA — Andrew Thomas, 26, made a deadly decision to get behind the wheel after he’d been drinking on Thanksgiving night. With his 23-year-old wife, Darien Ehorn in the passenger’s seat, Thomas left the Canteena Bar and was immediately pursued by Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster.

In a pursuit that barely lasted a minute, Thomas loses control of his Toyota Four-Runner, hit the median and flipped over. Tragically, Ehorn was ejected from the vehicle and died on the scene.

Officer Feaster then gets out of his vehicle, gun drawn, and as Thomas attempts to get out of the vehicle, in a likely attempt to check on his wife, the cop shoots him in the neck.

Thomas posed absolutely no threat to the officer who was 10-20 feet away from Thomas when he fired. There was no possible way the department could spin the shooting into Feaster somehow fearing for his life. So, they did something entirely different.

They claimed it was an accident.

Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey announced on Tuesday that Feaster would not face any charges, claiming that Feaster’s gun merely “went off” when it struck Thomas in the neck, hitting him in the C7 and T1 vertebrae, which will likely mean he will never walk again.

If this truly were an accidental shooting, Feaster would have probably reported firing his gun. However, that didn’ happen.

When backup arrived on the scene, Feaster said nothing of discharging his firearm. For 11 minutes, Thomas lay bleeding out in the vehicle before anyone even found the shot.

Only when the commanding officer on the scene suggested an investigator return to the Canteena to find out if Thomas had been shot at the bar did Feaster reveal he’d pulled the trigger.

According to Ramsey, there were multiple factors investigators used to determine the shooting to be accidental, conveniently igoring the fact that Feaster tried to cover it up.

Ramsey, in some weird play on words, said the evidence shows the shooting to be accidental, and possibly negligent, but not criminally so. “This shooting is not justified, but also not criminal.”

He then went on to describe things that are not at all present in the video, such as Feaster being “surprised by the gun’s firing.”

    “The dash cam video shows Officer Feaster was not prepared for and was surprised by the guns firing. The pistol discharges in mid-stride and the officer both flinches his head to the right and does a stutter step indicative of an officer not prepared for nor intentionally firing his pistol. Additionally, officers normally train to fire a minimum of two shots. There was no second shot and the officer immediately holstered his weapon after the discharge.”

The flinch and the step were not present, and, there was no need to fire a second shot as Thomas collapsed back into the vehicle immediately after the first one.

Thomas will certainly deserve the jail time that he gets for negligently killing his wife. But the bullet in his neck also warrants jail time. Unfortunately, because the person who put that bullet there wears a uniform and a badge, he will not see any.

Since the shooting, Feaster has been on paid administrative leave pending an ‘internal’ investigation. But, rest assured, since the DA decided not to file charges, there is no possible way that the department will.

Thomas, who had a blood alcohol concentration of .15, and who may never walk again, is expected to face driving under the influence and vehicular manslaughter charges.



The flinch and stutter step with the head movement certainly was there. Not sure why the author of the article didn't see it, I noticed it before I read the article. So the gun fired unintentionally. The problem as I see it is guns generally never fire without the trigger being pulled so it is highly unlikely it was a defective gun, and more likely it was a defective cop. That he never mentions it ... no matter how it happened, that is problematic