Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 996174 times)

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4850 on: April 24, 2020, 05:52:13 AM »
In a statement, Police Chief Timothy Altomare said he is “heart sick, physically ill, disgusted and enraged” by Koshlap’s alleged conduct.

“If someone wearing a badge betrays our oath of protection, we will do everything within our power to bring them to justice and make sure they never wear our uniform again,” he said.

Refreshing, thanks for bringing this to our attention skeletor


That’s great to hear & Thanks for Posting it up.
Only many many more police chiefs & DA’s Etc should echo & totally believe And Uphold them views.
Not the constant exonerations or Pathetic wet Lettuce Wrist Slaps Dished Out.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4851 on: April 24, 2020, 05:40:14 PM »
"Only the finest people"...

Fucking disgusting child abusers once again...

Louisiana sheriff’s deputy, junior-high teacher wife held on child rape and porn charges: reports

Photos of two suspects, a married couple, posing nude with a child were among the items authorities seized when a longtime sheriff’s deputy and a junior high school teacher were arrested this week in Louisiana on child rape and pornography charges, according to a report.

Taken into custody Wednesday were Dennis Perkins, 44, and his wife, Cynthia Perkins, 34, FOX 8 of New Orleans reported.

Both husband and wife were charged with 60 counts of production of pornography involving a child under 13, as well as rape charges, authorities said.

Dennis Perkins was additionally charged with obstruction of justice because he allegedly tossed his cellphone into a river after realizing investigators were about to arrest him while he was on a fishing trip, a source told FOX 8.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/louisiana-sheriffs-deputy-junior-high-teacher-wife-held-on-child-rape-and-porn-charges-report

Remember these disgusting pieces of shit? According to court filings it turns out that back in 1998 this "brave hero" applied for a position with the Baton Rouge Police Department. He was already a reserve deputy with the Livingston Parish Sheriff's Office at the time. During the application process, he allegedly admitted to several crimes including prostitution, sex with a minor and drug use. The Baton Rouge hiring board at that time voted unanimously not to hire Dennis. Despite all that and allegedly admitting to these crimes, he rose to be the SWAT commander of the LPSO. They seem to promote the finest people.

New court filings into Dennis & Cynthia Perkins reveal alleged pattern with child sex abuse

The Louisiana Attorney General’s Office has filed disturbing new documents that outline their alleged evidence against former high-ranking Livingston parish sheriff’s deputy Dennis Perkins and his former school-teacher wife, Cynthia.

The complete filing contains extremely graphic descriptions of the alleged crimes.

The new court filing includes a job application from 1998 to the Baton Rouge Police Department where Dennis allegedly admitted to several crimes including prostitution, sex with a minor and drug use. The BRPD hiring board at that time voted unanimously not to hire Dennis. He was a reserve deputy with LPSO when he applied for that job.

https://www.wafb.com/2020/04/20/kiran-new-court-filings-into-dennis-cynthia-perkins-reveal-alleged-pattern-with-child-sex/

The document below contains some very graphic and disturbing details:

https://documentcloud.adobe.com/link/track/?pageNum=51&uri=urn%3Aaaid%3Ascds%3AUS%3Aee87afe3-cbac-4aa5-b4f7-8813b8a7e004

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4852 on: April 24, 2020, 09:24:07 PM »
Good decision. However, this man spent almost 5 years in jail.

Court rules ‘Stand Your Ground’ applies in Florida man’s case in deputy shooting

A Fifth District Court of Appeals ruling means a Port St. John man will not face prosecution in connection with shooting of a Brevard County deputy.

Citing the ‘Stand Your Ground,’ law, the Fifth District Court of Appeals dismissed the longstanding charges against a Port St. John man accused of shooting a Brevard County Sheriff’s deputy during a botched arrest in front of his home in 2015.

The decision — issued Wednesday — ends the prosecution of John DeRossett, 60, on the attempted premeditated first-degree murder of a law enforcement officer while discharging a firearm. DeRossett spent nearly five years at the Brevard County Jail Complex in Sharpes as he awaited a trial. He was allowed to leave on bond in March.

“The appellate decision is better than a jury acquittal. An acquittal only means ‘not guilty.’ This order means that John is innocent, that his actions were justified, and that he never should have been arrested in the first place. It’s a total vindication,” said DeRossett’s Orlando-based attorney, Michael Panella.

https://www.jacksonville.com/news/20200416/court-rules-stand-your-ground-applies-in-florida-mans-case-in-deputy-shooting

can you tell me the details and facts that led you to conclude it was a good decision other than it was a law enforcement officer shot? I read the story and the facts are sorely lacking. Maybe you have some additional details?

Soul Crusher

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4853 on: April 28, 2020, 06:55:01 AM »
Our Dress Rehearsal for a Police State
Townhall.com ^ | April 28, 2020 | Dennis Prager
Posted on 4/28/2020, 7:11:32 AM by Kaslin



All my life, I have dismissed paranoids on the right ("America is headed to communism") and the left ("It can happen here" -- referring to fascism). It's not that I've ever believed liberty was guaranteed. Being familiar with history and a pessimist regarding the human condition, I never believed that.

But the ease with which police state tactics have been employed and the equal ease with which most Americans have accepted them have been breathtaking.

People will argue that a temporary police state has been justified because of the allegedly unique threat to life posed by the new coronavirus. I do not believe the data will bear that out. Regardless, let us at least agree that we are closer to a police state than ever in American history.

"Police state" does not mean totalitarian state. America is not a totalitarian state; we still have many freedoms. In a totalitarian state, this article could not be legally published, and if it were illegally published, I would be imprisoned and/or executed. But we are presently living with all four of the key hallmarks of a police state:

No. 1: Draconian laws depriving citizens of elementary civil rights.

The federal, state, county and city governments are now restricting almost every freedom except those of travel and speech. Americans have been banned from going to work (and thereby earning a living), meeting in groups (both indoors and outdoors), meeting in their cars in church parking lots to pray and entering state-owned properties such as beaches and parks -- among many other prohibitions.

No. 2: A mass media supportive of the state's messaging and deprivation of rights.

The New York Times, CNN and every other mainstream mass medium -- except Fox News, The Wall Street Journal (editorial and opinion pages only) and talk radio -- have served the cause of state control over individual Americans' lives just as Pravda served the Soviet government. In fact, there is almost no more dissent in The New York Times than there was in Pravda. And the Big Tech platforms are removing posts about the virus and potential treatments they deem "misinformation."

No. 3: Use of police.

Police departments throughout America have agreed to enforce these laws and edicts with what can only be described as frightening alacrity. After hearing me describe police giving summonses to, or even arresting, people for playing baseball with their children on a beach, jogging alone without a mask, or worshipping on Easter while sitting isolated in their cars in a church parking lot, a police officer called my show. He explained that the police have no choice. They must respond to every dispatch they receive.

"And why are they dispatched to a person jogging on a beach or sitting alone in a park?" I asked.

Because the department was informed about these lawbreakers.

"And who told the police about these lawbreakers?" I asked.

His answer brings us to the fourth characteristic of a police state:

No. 4: Snitches.

How do the police dispatchers learn of lawbreakers such as families playing softball in a public park, lone joggers without face masks, etc.? From their fellow citizens snitching on them. The mayor of New York City, Bill de Blasio, set up a "snitch line," whereby New Yorkers were told to send authorities photos of fellow New Yorkers violating any of the quarantine laws. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti similarly encouraged snitching, unabashedly using the term.

It is said that about 1 in every 100 East German citizens were informers for the Stasi, the East German secret police, as superbly portrayed in the film "The Lives of Others." It would be interesting, and, I think, important, to know what percentage of New Yorkers informed on their fellow citizens. Now, again, you may think such a comparison is not morally valid, that de Blasio's call to New Yorkers to serve a Stasi-like role was morally justified given the coronavirus pandemic. But you cannot deny it is Stasi-like or that, other than identifying spies during World War II, this is unprecedented in American history at anywhere near this level.

This past Friday night, I gathered with six others for a Shabbat dinner with friends in Santa Monica, California. On my Friday radio show, I announced I would be doing that, and if I was arrested, it would be worth it. In my most pessimistic dreams, I never imagined that in America, having dinner at a friend's house would be an act of civil disobedience, perhaps even a criminal act. But that is precisely what happens in a police state.

The reason I believe this is a dress rehearsal is that too many Americans appear untroubled by it; the dominant force in America, the left, supports it, and one of the two major political parties has been taken over by the left. Democrats and their supporters have, in effect, announced they will use state power to enforce any law they can to combat the even greater "existential" crisis of global warming.

On the CNN website this weekend, in one of the most frightening and fanatical articles in an era of fanaticism, Bill Weir, CNN chief climate correspondent, wrote an open letter to his newborn son. In it, he wrote of his idealized future for America: "completely new forms of power, food, construction, transportation, economics and politics."

You cannot get there without a police state.

If you love liberty, you must see that it is jeopardized more than at any time since America's founding. And that means, among other things, that at this time, a vote for any Democrat is a vote to end liberty.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4854 on: April 29, 2020, 02:26:28 PM »
That's what happens when you give fat, incompetent people a badge and "authority". All this because according to the cops "a man was moving between 2 train cars, in violation of  City ordinance".

Charges dropped in case of man shot by Chicago police in incident captured on 'extremely disturbing' video

Chicago authorities are dropping charges against a man shot twice by a police officer at a downtown train station in an incident caught on cellphone video that the mayor described as "extremely disturbing."

Interim Police Superintendent Charlie Beck has asked prosecutors to drop narcotics and resisting-arrest charges against Ariel Roman in light of the events around the episode, police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement tweeted Sunday.

Roman was initially accused of illegally moving between two train cars and was shot during an altercation with police officers. Multiple investigations into Friday's incident were underway Sunday, and both officers involved were placed on administrative duties pending the outcome.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/03/01/chicago-shooting-extremely-disturbing-video-shows-train-incident/4922204002/

Video:
https://twitter.com/FreeRangeCritic/status/1233536447749201921

More videos of this incident:

Police Watchdog Agency Releases New Videos Of Officer Shooting Ariel Roman At Red Line Station

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability on Tuesday released 18 new videos showing a Chicago police officer shooting an unarmed man at a busy CTA station in February, after confronting him for passing between cars on a Red Line train.

The videos include a longer version of the infamous cell phone video showing Officer Melvina Bogard shooting Ariel Roman in the stomach and lower at the Grand Red Line station on Feb. 28.

As CBS 2’s Charlie De Mar reported Tuesday night, some of the videos are also body camera videos, while others are from the Chicago Transit Authority and bystanders. But what you won’t see are the body camera videos from the perspective of the officers at the center of the incident, which were not included.

The FBI and the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office have opened criminal investigations into the shooting.

Use of force experts who reviewed the video with CBS 2’s Megan Hickey have said the footage is problematic, particularly given that Roman was walking away when he was shot.

“The law simply doesn’t allow what I saw in the video,” said University of Pittsburgh law professor David A. Harris.

“I don’t see him strike the officers. I don’t see him at any time with a weapon,” said Retired LAPD SWAT Sgt. Scott Defoe.

Both Harris and Defoe said the video does not suggest that Roman was a deadly threat. And police are not allowed to use deadly force to prevent an escape – which appeared to be what happened when the shot rang out as Roman ran up the escalator.

https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/04/28/ariel-roman-police-shooting-red-line-civilian-office-of-police-accountability-videos-officers-melvina-bogard-bernard-butler/

https://www.chicagocopa.org/case/2020-0988/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4855 on: April 30, 2020, 10:50:38 PM »
This guy was going to schools teaching a class called “Sexting and Social Media”.

Of course no criminal charges for him and he resigned before he could be fired.

Cartersville cop resigns after ‘inappropriate’ messages with middle school girls

A Cartersville police lieutenant resigned in lieu of termination amid an internal investigation into dozens of Snapchat messages and texts that he sent to middle school girls, authorities said.

Lt. Ryan Prescott, who also worked as the school resource officer at Cartersville Middle School, admitted to sending the messages to three girls, which the department found “unprofessional and inappropriate” according to documents obtained by AJC.com through an open records request.

https://www.ajc.com/news/crime--law/cartersville-cop-resigns-after-inappropriate-messages-with-middle-school-girls/jq1Y8bwW3xfhNgzCGxI9VM/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4856 on: May 03, 2020, 03:59:01 PM »
More videos of this incident:

Police Watchdog Agency Releases New Videos Of Officer Shooting Ariel Roman At Red Line Station

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability on Tuesday released 18 new videos showing a Chicago police officer shooting an unarmed man at a busy CTA station in February, after confronting him for passing between cars on a Red Line train.

The videos include a longer version of the infamous cell phone video showing Officer Melvina Bogard shooting Ariel Roman in the stomach and lower at the Grand Red Line station on Feb. 28.

As CBS 2’s Charlie De Mar reported Tuesday night, some of the videos are also body camera videos, while others are from the Chicago Transit Authority and bystanders. But what you won’t see are the body camera videos from the perspective of the officers at the center of the incident, which were not included.

The FBI and the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office have opened criminal investigations into the shooting.

Use of force experts who reviewed the video with CBS 2’s Megan Hickey have said the footage is problematic, particularly given that Roman was walking away when he was shot.

“The law simply doesn’t allow what I saw in the video,” said University of Pittsburgh law professor David A. Harris.

“I don’t see him strike the officers. I don’t see him at any time with a weapon,” said Retired LAPD SWAT Sgt. Scott Defoe.

Both Harris and Defoe said the video does not suggest that Roman was a deadly threat. And police are not allowed to use deadly force to prevent an escape – which appeared to be what happened when the shot rang out as Roman ran up the escalator.

https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/04/28/ariel-roman-police-shooting-red-line-civilian-office-of-police-accountability-videos-officers-melvina-bogard-bernard-butler/

https://www.chicagocopa.org/case/2020-0988/

Turns out the female cop who shot this man had been charged with assault 2 years before being hired as a cop.

Officer involved in Grand Red Line shooting was charged with assault 2 years before CPD hired her



The Chicago police officer who shot an unarmed man at the Grand Red Line station on Friday was charged with assaulting a McDonald’s restaurant worker in 2015, less than two years before the city hired her to become a cop. Prosecutors dropped the case when the alleged victim failed to appear in court.

https://cwbchicago.com/2020/03/officer-involved-in-grand-red-line-shooting-was-charged-with-assault-2-years-before-cpd-hired-her.html

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4857 on: May 05, 2020, 02:30:28 AM »
Turns out the female cop who shot this man had been charged with assault 2 years before being hired as a cop.

Officer involved in Grand Red Line shooting was charged with assault 2 years before CPD hired her



The Chicago police officer who shot an unarmed man at the Grand Red Line station on Friday was charged with assaulting a McDonald’s restaurant worker in 2015, less than two years before the city hired her to become a cop. Prosecutors dropped the case when the alleged victim failed to appear in court.

https://cwbchicago.com/2020/03/officer-involved-in-grand-red-line-shooting-was-charged-with-assault-2-years-before-cpd-hired-her.html

Well at least they’re not hiding the Fact they’re hiring Thugs - From assaulting a McDonalds Staff To Shooting that man, Great Progression In 2yrs - I bet Chicago Police top Brass are patting each other’s back with the excellent selection of Her.

😂🤣😂🤣😂

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4858 on: May 05, 2020, 01:31:22 PM »
WOW. YOU HAVE TWO YEARS TO TURN IN 1500 STYLES OF GUN TO THE GOVT IN CANADA.


Following Canada's deadliest mass shooting, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau banned over 1,500 models and variants of assault-style firearms, including two guns used by the Nova Scotia gunman.

“You do not need an AR-15 to take down a deer,” Trudeau said Friday. “So, effective immediately, it is no longer permitted to buy, sell, transport, import, or use military-grade, assault weapons in this country.”




https://www.foxnews.com/us/connecticut-gun-manufacturers-ranch-rifle-among-weapons-banned-in-canada


Soul Crusher

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4860 on: May 06, 2020, 06:07:59 AM »

Soul Crusher

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4861 on: May 06, 2020, 08:57:31 AM »
https://www.foxla.com/video/681204

How can anyone defend this?

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4862 on: May 06, 2020, 10:27:16 AM »
Once again the uniformed criminals go unpunished, protected by immunity.

Lawsuit dismissed for Ga. woman wrongly jailed over cotton candy mistake

A Macon woman now knows how much money she will get for being wrongly jailed over a false positive field test.

Zero.

Dasha Fincher, 43, sued the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office and others over her arrest on New Year’s Eve of 2016. Deputies used a disposable field test kit to examine a clump of blue material they found in a bag in the car.

Fincher and her boyfriend David Morris allowed the search. Deputies originally pulled them over because they thought the car window tinting was too dark. It was not. Fincher told deputies the blue material was cotton candy. But deputies decided the test kit showed a positive reading for methamphetamines.

Morris had a prior conviction for trafficking in meth. Fincher had served three years probation on a marijuana charge. Deputies found no other evidence of drug use in their car.

Fincher and Morris would spend the next 94 days in the Monroe County Jail, unable to make a $1 million cash bond, set that high because of the amount of suspected meth.

She would miss the birth of her twin grandsons.

The charges were finally dropped when the GBI Crime Lab determined the sample was not a controlled substance.

https://www.fox5atlanta.com/news/lawsuit-dismissed-for-ga-woman-wrongly-jailed-over-cotton-candy-mistake


Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4864 on: May 06, 2020, 09:57:21 PM »
Nothing to see here folks.. move alone

https://champ.gothamist.com/champ/gothamist/news/nypd-officer-seen-beating-man-social-distancing-arrest-has-history-alleged-brutality



"NY's finest".

Quote
The NYPD officer who violently arrested a man in the East Village during a social distancing stop this weekend has a lengthy history of alleged brutality — garnering more than half a dozen misconduct lawsuits in five years, and costing city taxpayers nearly $200,000, according to the Legal Aid Society.

According to a complaint filed in 2013, Garcia allegedly told a woman eating with her partner inside a Harlem restaurant that she "dressed like a man." When the woman attempted to get his badge number, Garcia allegedly pushed her, then replied: "Take a fucking picture of it, fucking dyke." The city settled that suit for $8,500.

A year later, Garcia was accused of wrongfully arresting a man trying to visit his girlfriend inside a Washington Heights NYCHA building. According to a federal lawsuit, which the city settled for $27,500, Garcia "forced [the man] to the floor face-first," then punched, kicked, and clubbed him.

And here's why you don't often hear of a cop's past record while ordinary people are dragged through the mud like they're hardened career criminals by mentioning any minor infraction or arrest:

Quote
A spokesperson for the NYPD did not respond to inquiries about whether Garcia ever faced discipline for past instances of misconduct. The department is not required to disclose such records, due to a state secrecy law that is among the nation's most restrictive.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4865 on: May 07, 2020, 11:31:46 AM »
"That's what you get for eluding". Federal lawsuit alleges Denver officer beat man in his own back yard



A lawsuit filed Tuesday in federal court alleges that a Denver Police officer beat a man in his own backyard after he admitted to driving away from law enforcement during a traffic stop on New Year’s Eve 2019. The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Denver man Justin Lecheminant, also alleges that the department failed to properly investigate the use of force incident.

During the incident, Lecheminant suffered a broken nose, punctured eardrum, multiple broken ribs and a serious concussion, the lawsuit alleges.

https://www.9news.com/article/news/crime/denver-police-brutality-lawsuit-justin-lecheminant/73-d6106b2a-3be9-4fcf-92bb-90baa2e29b61

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4866 on: May 08, 2020, 10:20:34 AM »
Police Officer Compelled To Speak Out Against Tyrannical Enforcement

&t=9s

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4867 on: May 09, 2020, 12:31:38 AM »

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4868 on: May 09, 2020, 03:27:45 PM »
Not only did he rob people during traffic stops but he even filled out the blank money orders in his name and then went to the bank in uniform to deposit them.

Notice that there is no mugshot, when ordinary people have their mughsot published (and the mugshot industry is a very dirty business) even when the charges are dropped or even acquitted. This is why:

"Henley’s mugshot is exempt from the release under Florida law due to his law enforcement status."

So they claim he is "fired" but at the same time his mugshot can't be published due to his "law enforcement status".


ECSO Deputy Arrested, Fired For Stealing Money Orders After Traffic Stop

An Escambia County Sheriff’s Office deputy has been arrested and terminated after he was accused of stealing money orders from a vehicle after making an arrest.

William Christopher Henley, 37, was charged with burglary, four counts of larceny, dealing in stolen property, fraud, two counts of intent to defraud and destroying evidence. He remained in the Escambia County Jail Friday afternoon without bond.

A woman contacted the ECSO to report money orders had been stolen from a vehicle driven by her boyfriend. The boyfriend was pulled over and arrested by Henley on outstanding warrants, and the vehicle was left behind. The women contacted Western Union  and was provided copies that showed they had been deposited by William Henley. The address on the money orders matched that in Henley’s ECSO employee file, according to an arrest report.

ECSO investigators obtained surveillance photos from Navy Federal that showed Henley in uniform depositing the money orders, the report states. The values of the money order were $200 and $500.

http://www.northescambia.com/2020/05/ecso-deputy-arrested-fired-for-stealing-money-orders-after-traffic-stop


Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4869 on: May 09, 2020, 06:17:31 PM »
Kentucky State Police trooper punches, kicks handcuffed mentally ill man

A Kentucky State Police trooper beat a handcuffed schizophrenic man after arresting him in March 2019, slamming his head against a wall, and punching and kicking him repeatedly before throwing him to the ground, according to video from a jail recording system.

The footage sheds light on a Bowling Green case that left the beaten man, Timothy “Michael” Heston, in jail for 11 months because state police withheld the video, a new lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit claims State Police Trooper Aaron Tucker “attacked Michael, who is bi-racial, without provocation, warning or justification and then fabricated a report about the assault.”

Heston spent nearly a year in jail; police failed to provide the video to prosecutors, defense attorneys or the judge, according to the suit. The charges were later dismissed.

When the trooper took Heston to jail on charges of terroristic threatening and resisting arrest, among other charges, Heston “tensed up” when he was taken out of the cruiser, resisted, attempted to spit on Tucker and “used his head to hit me,” according to the arrest citation.

“After the altercation had ensued, I was able to regain control of the above offender by placing him on the ground,” Tucker wrote. 

But in the video, obtained by WDRB News, Tucker gets Heston out of the cruiser and, after walking him to the door, Heston seems to weave or stumble and the trooper punches him in the face, pins him against the wall and hits him with his fist several more times. Tucker also knees the defendant in the face and chest several times before taking him to the ground, the video shows. Heston was handcuffed behind his back.

There is no sound in the video and it does not appear Heston was resisting. It is unclear if Heston spit on or toward the trooper.

State Police conducted an internal investigation of the case and fired Tucker, according to the lawsuit. KSP confirmed that Tucker is no longer employed but did not comment on the lawsuit. The charges against Heston, 27, were eventually dismissed, but not until after he had been indicted.

The lawsuit claims State Police initially withheld the video from the prosecution, the defense, and the judge, causing him to remain in jail until the case was ultimately dismissed.


https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/video-kentucky-state-police-trooper-punches-kicks-handcuffed-mentally-ill-man/article_f05ed566-9089-11ea-81b1-6f601210b02c.html

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4870 on: May 11, 2020, 04:48:37 PM »
As if one "brave hero" attacking a 65 year old woman was not enough, he asked for backup and it took a total of 3 cops to attack this poor woman. Funny how one of the "heroes" who arrived as backup resigned after complaining that he "wouldn't receive fair treatment" in the internal investigation (imagine that).

Grandmother seeks $1.5 million in excessive force suit vs. Alpharetta police

A woman who says Alpharetta officers used excessive force against her during a traffic stop is seeking $1.5 million in damages, according to her federal lawsuit.

Rose Campbell, now 67, suffered physical injuries that required surgery, emotional trauma and has been unable to work consistently since the May 2018 incident, the lawsuit states. Campbell was working as a ride-share driver when she was pulled over on Ga. 400 by an officer who said she was not maintaining her lane. A spokesman for Alpharetta police declined to comment on the lawsuit, filed Sunday. The Alpharetta assistant city administrator said the city does not comment on pending litigation.

Campbell refused to sign the citation and asked repeatedly to speak with the officer’s supervisor. Dash cam video later released of the incident appears to show Officer James Legg using profanity towards Campbell and pulling her out of her car. Additional officers also arrived at the scene to assist Legg. “Shut the (expletive) up and get out of the car,” Legg is heard saying in the video. Legg later resigned from the department, but defended his actions.

https://www.ajc.com/news/crime--law/grandmother-seeks-million-excessive-force-suit-alpharetta-police/JO4Ka8ifCipDr87BhaYoJN/


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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4871 on: May 11, 2020, 05:03:16 PM »

Insane.  Totally fng insane

Kentucky State Police trooper punches, kicks handcuffed mentally ill man

A Kentucky State Police trooper beat a handcuffed schizophrenic man after arresting him in March 2019, slamming his head against a wall, and punching and kicking him repeatedly before throwing him to the ground, according to video from a jail recording system.

The footage sheds light on a Bowling Green case that left the beaten man, Timothy “Michael” Heston, in jail for 11 months because state police withheld the video, a new lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit claims State Police Trooper Aaron Tucker “attacked Michael, who is bi-racial, without provocation, warning or justification and then fabricated a report about the assault.”

Heston spent nearly a year in jail; police failed to provide the video to prosecutors, defense attorneys or the judge, according to the suit. The charges were later dismissed.

When the trooper took Heston to jail on charges of terroristic threatening and resisting arrest, among other charges, Heston “tensed up” when he was taken out of the cruiser, resisted, attempted to spit on Tucker and “used his head to hit me,” according to the arrest citation.

“After the altercation had ensued, I was able to regain control of the above offender by placing him on the ground,” Tucker wrote. 

But in the video, obtained by WDRB News, Tucker gets Heston out of the cruiser and, after walking him to the door, Heston seems to weave or stumble and the trooper punches him in the face, pins him against the wall and hits him with his fist several more times. Tucker also knees the defendant in the face and chest several times before taking him to the ground, the video shows. Heston was handcuffed behind his back.

There is no sound in the video and it does not appear Heston was resisting. It is unclear if Heston spit on or toward the trooper.

State Police conducted an internal investigation of the case and fired Tucker, according to the lawsuit. KSP confirmed that Tucker is no longer employed but did not comment on the lawsuit. The charges against Heston, 27, were eventually dismissed, but not until after he had been indicted.

The lawsuit claims State Police initially withheld the video from the prosecution, the defense, and the judge, causing him to remain in jail until the case was ultimately dismissed.


https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/video-kentucky-state-police-trooper-punches-kicks-handcuffed-mentally-ill-man/article_f05ed566-9089-11ea-81b1-6f601210b02c.html

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4872 on: May 11, 2020, 05:18:41 PM »
Police Officer Compelled To Speak Out Against Tyrannical Enforcement

&t=9s

Officer placed on paid leave following video chastising other officers

Port of Seattle Police Officer Greg Anderson said three hours after he was told by his department they were in full support of his video that he got a call instructing him to take down the video, which he refused to do.

Now, Anderson has been placed on paid administrative leave pending an investigation.

In a statement, Anderson wrote, “I’ve received tons of questions regarding my termination from the Port of Seattle Police. So I figured I should explain. I have been placed on administrative leave (still being paid) pending investigation. I was told by both the agency and my union that this will result in termination due to it being an insubordination charge for refusing to take down the video. I’m not sure what the timeline looks like. I walk un-intimidated into the fray. Thank you for all the support.”

https://www.ocalapost.com/officer-placed-on-paid-leave-following-video-chastising-other-officers/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4873 on: May 12, 2020, 10:30:47 AM »
In the midst of the Covid-19 crisis, the cops kill an EMT while she is sleeping in her home.

Conveniently, the killers did not wear body cameras. Of course none of them has been arrested.


Family of Louisville EMT killed during LMPD raid files wrongful death lawsuit against officers



The family of a Louisville EMT killed in what's been alleged to have been a botched Louisville Metro Police raid has filed a lawsuit against the officers involved, claiming she did "nothing to deserve to die at their hands."

Attorneys say police had the wrong home and that the suspect they were looking for was already in custody before the raid. Nothing illegal was found in Taylor's home.

The officers burst into the home without knocking and "blindly fired" into it, spraying bullets into Taylor's house and neighboring apartments "with a total disregard for the value of human life," according to the lawsuit. Taylor, 26, was shot eight times.

Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, thought they were being robbed, according to his attorney, and fired at officers when they rushed in, hitting LMPD Sgt. John Mattingly in the leg.

Breonna Taylor was shot multiple times after officers used a battering ram to get into her home on Springfield Drive in south Louisville about 1 a.m. on March 13 in order to serve a warrant.

Police say there is no body camera footage from the raid as officers in LMPD criminal interdiction division do not wear body cameras.

https://www.wdrb.com/news/family-of-louisville-emt-killed-during-lmpd-raid-files-wrongful-death-lawsuit-against-officers/article_8caf7c9c-93b7-11ea-8253-5fbf4d80f0e7.html

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4874 on: May 12, 2020, 08:40:13 PM »
Sentenced to death and remained in prison for a combined 100+ years... No amount of money can bring back the years these men lost. The cops who were involved in this injustice will not pay a penny out of their own pockets and of course will not spend the rest of their life in prison, let alone get sentenced to death like these poor men.

Cleveland men reach $18 million settlement after being wrongfully convicted, spending years in prison

Three Cleveland men have reportedly reached an $18 million settlement in a lawsuit against the City of Cleveland and former detectives.

According to a press release from attorneys Friedman and Gilbert, the lawsuit was for police misconduct and wrongful imprisonment. They said it puts an end to a 45-year “nightmare.”

According to the release, Kwame Ajamu, formerly known as Ronnie Bridgeman; Wiley Bridgeman; and, Ricky Jackson were wrongfully convicted and imprisoned for a combined 100-plus years for “a murder they did not commit.”

The men were convicted on the testimony of a witness who was 12 years old in 1975 at the time of the murder. That witness, Edward Vernon, has since recanted, saying he was pressured by police into making the identifications.

https://fox8.com/news/cleveland-men-reach-18-million-settlement-after-being-wrongfully-convicted-spending-years-in-prison/