Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 989768 times)

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2900 on: April 27, 2016, 06:46:17 PM »
Remember this case?

Ex-Oklahoma deputy Robert Bates guilty of killing unarmed suspect
By Ralph Ellis, Christopher Lett and Sara Sidner, CNN

Tulsa, Oklahoma (CNN)A jury found a sheriff's deputy guilty of second-degree manslaughter Wednesday in the fatal shooting of an unarmed suspect.

Robert Bates, who was a volunteer reserve sheriff deputy for the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office last year at the time of the shooting, never denied killing Eric Courtney Harris.
Bates, 74, said he meant to use his Taser stun gun, not his revolver, on the suspect, who had been tackled by other deputies and was being held on the ground.

The jury deliberated less than three hours and recommended Bates serve four years in prison, the maximum possible sentence. Preliminary sentencing is set for May 31. After the verdict, Bates was escorted out of the courtroom by two deputies from the department he once served.

In his closing argument to the jury, defense lawyer Clark Brewster said Bates should be be thanked for trying to help his fellow deputies. He displayed the stun gun and Bates' pistol and showed how they were similar size and weight.

"He got out of his vehicle to man up and help," Brewster said. "I truly believe you will find this was an accident driven to this point by the actions of Mr. Harris."

Prosecutor John David Luton told the jury Bates was nodding off in his car before the arrest. He said it was wrong to blame Harris for the shooting.

"Bob Bates didn't act with usual and ordinary care," Luton said in his closing argument. "He also didn't do what a reasonable person would do under similar circumstances. ... Eric Harris deserved to be chased, he deserved to be tackled, he deserved to be arrested. He did not deserve to be killed by reserve deputy Bob Bates."

Read the rest of the article:

http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/27/us/tulsa-deputy-manslaughter-trial/

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2901 on: April 28, 2016, 07:00:26 AM »
Remember this case?

Ex-Oklahoma deputy Robert Bates guilty of killing unarmed suspect
By Ralph Ellis, Christopher Lett and Sara Sidner, CNN

Tulsa, Oklahoma (CNN)A jury found a sheriff's deputy guilty of second-degree manslaughter Wednesday in the fatal shooting of an unarmed suspect.

Robert Bates, who was a volunteer reserve sheriff deputy for the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office last year at the time of the shooting, never denied killing Eric Courtney Harris.
Bates, 74, said he meant to use his Taser stun gun, not his revolver, on the suspect, who had been tackled by other deputies and was being held on the ground.

The jury deliberated less than three hours and recommended Bates serve four years in prison, the maximum possible sentence. Preliminary sentencing is set for May 31. After the verdict, Bates was escorted out of the courtroom by two deputies from the department he once served.

In his closing argument to the jury, defense lawyer Clark Brewster said Bates should be be thanked for trying to help his fellow deputies. He displayed the stun gun and Bates' pistol and showed how they were similar size and weight.

"He got out of his vehicle to man up and help," Brewster said. "I truly believe you will find this was an accident driven to this point by the actions of Mr. Harris."

Prosecutor John David Luton told the jury Bates was nodding off in his car before the arrest. He said it was wrong to blame Harris for the shooting.

"Bob Bates didn't act with usual and ordinary care," Luton said in his closing argument. "He also didn't do what a reasonable person would do under similar circumstances. ... Eric Harris deserved to be chased, he deserved to be tackled, he deserved to be arrested. He did not deserve to be killed by reserve deputy Bob Bates."

Read the rest of the article:

http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/27/us/tulsa-deputy-manslaughter-trial/

He should be thanked? what a f'd up thing to say

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2902 on: April 28, 2016, 08:08:40 AM »
He should be thanked? what a f'd up thing to say








Yes it is-- Shows Just How Fucked Up The System & Their Perspective Is.
Judge is an ArseWipes.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2903 on: April 28, 2016, 09:46:37 AM »
The other guards who sat passively should also be investigated.

New Mexico Jail Guard Knocked Out Prisoner, Charged With Aggravated Assault

Surveillance video is sending a New Mexico jail guard to criminal court for knocking out a handcuffed prisoner, body slamming him on a concrete floor in a detention area when he wasn’t posing any threat to the safety of officers.

Inmate Timothy K. Black ended up losing consciousness in the November 2015 incident, according to the Las Cruces Sun-News.

Now Dona Ana County detention officer Luis Ruiz is being charged with aggravated battery resulting great bodily harm for “guiding the Black to the floor”. Ruiz has been with the correctional department since April 2010, now possibly faces being on the other side of the bars.

After throwing Black to the ground and knocking him out, the officers are seen continuing to strip the man of his clothing as six other officers standby and watch. None of the officers watching seem to reach as the man is laying there not moving. Even after he is pulled up to his knees against medical protocol for possible head or neck injuries, no officer is seen reacting to intervene or administer medical assistance.

Black was unable to soften the blow or protect himself from the fall with his hands already cuffed behind him. Medical personnel were called to assist and evaluate Black, where they treated him. A nurse from Las Cruces Hospital later confirmed Black had lost consciousness.

Black was searched a second time while standing against the wall after being evaluated for his injuries.

Ruiz claimed Black had attempted to kick him while he was searching his legs. The other officer who was assisting him could not collaborate Ruiz’s claim. After reviewing the video New Mexico State Police investigator, Erika Contreras, determined Black did not attempt to kick him.

Black who was arrested for “resisting or obstructing officers”, also known as contempt of cop charges, after reporting of him welding a knife.

On January 19, Contreras initally wrote in her report prosecutors initially declined to bring charges against Ruiz, however the District Attorney’s Office disputed that claim and stated they were still reviewing the video.

The county jail administrator, Christopher Barela, stated internal investigation immediately ordered and is an ongoing investigation into policy and procedures.

“We have an obligation to the community and to the detainee population to ensure this facility operates in a humane and professional manner at all times,” Barela said in a statement. “A full investigation will allow the management team to fully evaluate what happened and why, so that appropriate disciplinary action — if any — can be taken.”



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/new-mexico-jail-guard-criminally-charged/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2904 on: April 28, 2016, 09:49:58 AM »
Federal Judge Allows Lawsuit to Proceed Against Texas Cops who Shot and Killed Passive Dog

A federal judge in Texas ruled in favor of a plaintiff in a case against an officer who admitted a man’s dog didn’t pose a threat before he shot and killed it.

Austin police officer Daniel Walsh said Shiner Bock, the dog, “was just kinda walking at me, he wasn’t, he didn’t, I mean . . .’before breaking off the end of his sentence,” an officer at the scene heard him say, according to the lawsuit.

On April 24th in 2013, Julian Reyes was at his artist-warehouse preparing his art for an event at Eeyore’s Birthday Party, an annual party in Austin, when he heard gunshots.

When Reyes walked outside to investigate, Austin officers Walsh and Christopher Anderson, forced him to the ground at gunpoint and handcuffed him, frisking him and searching his truck and storage unit – even though was not suspected of a crime.

While handcuffed, Reyes repeatedly asked officers what happened to his dog, who he’d noticed bleeding.

Eventually officer Anderson stated, “your dog is dead.”

He later learned Walsh had shot and killed him while investigating “banging noise” that ended up being a piece of loose tin blowing in the wind.

According to the lawsuit, police had already determined the noise was caused from ‘loose siding blowing in the wind’ when Walsh drove his vehicle onto private property, parked and approached Reyes’ storage unit on foot.

When he got closer to the unit, he heard Shiner Bock bark and saw the dog standing outside the unit.

According to the police report, officer Walsh then shouted to the dog, “Don’t move! Get back!”

Bock barked again, and Walsh shot him several times in the chest.

The dog then bled to death as Reyes watched.

United States Judge Robert Pitman allowed eight of ten of Reyes’ civil rights claims to go forward. His order was issued and filed on April 20th.

The lawsuit names Austin officer Daniel Walsh, officer Christopher, as well as Police Chief Hubert “Art” Acevedo and City Manager, Marc Ott in their ‘individual capacities’.

Reyes’ initial complaint alleged his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when police performed warrantless searches on his storage unit, truck and person and that his detainment, as well as the violent shooting death of his dog, constitute unconstitutional seizures and unreasonable searches of his self and his property.

It also alleged that Chief Hubert “Art” Acevedo and City Manager Ott, “formulated, approved, and put into effect an inadequate training program regarding the use of force against animals.”

The judge’s order means the evidence and testimony about the claims will be heard at a future date after more evidence becomes available. But it’s not looking good for Austin police, a department that shot and killed 21 dogs in 2012 alone.

Judge Pitman denied two of Reyes’ claims of negligence against the City of Austin regarding failure to develop proper policies regarding use of force against dogs.

We caught up with Reyes to talk about what happened that day as well his thoughts about the lawsuit, which he filed pro se to preserve the statute of limitations after things with his lawyer didn’t work out.

He was later appointed an attorney after claiming indigence.  We’ll keep you updated as the case moves along. You can also follow his case on his Facebook page, Support for Shiner Bock.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/federal-judge-allows-lawsuit-to-proceed-against-texas-cops-who-shot-and-killed-passive-dog/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2905 on: April 28, 2016, 09:21:39 PM »
Brothers Who were Arrested for Fighting Back Against Violent Cops — Beat Charges, Win Settlement

Southfield, MI —  Two men went from being arrested and facing felony charges to being released, cleared of all charges, and now, given a six-figure settlement — after getting into a restaurant brawl with two belligerent Detroit cops.

Tywonn Mitchell, 20, and Naybon Moore, 26, were driving to Grandy’s Coney Island back in May of 2013 when they were followed into the parking lot by two Detroit cops.

Having done nothing illegal and knowing their rights, the two men thought little of the police car and walked inside to get their food.

At the time, Mitchell was about to be a Junior at Madonna University, studying criminal justice. Mitchell’s brother Moore is also college educated, and both of them were entirely informed on their rights.
After they had entered the store, two bully Detroit police officers followed them in. That’s when the harassment began.

The officers demanded that the two men produce their IDs. However, these two gentlemen weren’t the pushovers that the officers took them for.

Mitchell and Moore knew that they were being shaken down for no reason and that these two officers were trying to unlawfully detain them. When the men refused to be harassed and refused to “show their papers,” one officer became violent.

The officer, as if he was intentionally trying to start a fight, pushed one of the brothers in the chest. That’s when Moore merely pushed the officer’s hands away. He and his brother were then met with a cop’s fist to the face. A full-on brawl ensued.

The two brothers eventually stopped the fight and were booked and charged with felony assault on an officer.

The Detroit police department also cleared both officers in this case, stating that the “use of force [was] appropriate and reasonable.”


However, in a completely atypical move by the prosecutor’s office, after reviewing the footage, all of the charges were dropped.

Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office disagreed with Detroit police and said that the detainment was unreasonable and that the two men were acting in self-defense.

When police are threatened, they react with violence, and the situation can get out of hand quickly. Had these circumstances been slightly different these two brothers could have been killed.

Both of these Detroit police officers are still on duty today.

The settlement was just paid by the city of Detroit – or more accurately the taxpayers.

“It is an unfortunate circumstance that taxpayers continue to pay for stupid mistakes,” said Herbert Sanders, and attorney for the men.


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/brothers-arrested-fighting-violent-cops-beat-charges-win-settlement

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2906 on: April 29, 2016, 10:03:36 AM »
Video Shows Cops Do Nothing as Fellow Officer Brutally Beats a Handcuffed Woman

Jacksonville, FL — Mayra Martinez, 31, had a bad first day on the job at the local Scores Bar in Jacksonville. That afternoon, she became intoxicated, quit, and refused to leave, so police were called — this would turn her bad day into a horrifying one.

When police arrived at the bar around 5 p.m., they arrested Martinez and charged her with trespassing and resisting.

According to the police report, Martinez was drunk and belligerent when two officers showed up to remove her from the property. One of those officers was Akinyemi Borisade, 26. When police tried to place her in handcuffs, Martinez tried to kick and bite officers, according to the report. However, as Martinez is much smaller than the two officers who were taking her in, they were easily able to overpower her.

Martinez was then transported to the Duval County jail where things would take a turn for the worse. Video released by the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office shows Martinez attempt to walk over to the officers before Borisade grabs her and slams her into the wall.

After being slammed into the wall by the officer, Borisade proceeded to unleash a fury of fists to the head and face of Martinez after her foot grazed his pant leg.

“He could have turned her around and held her in a transporting position that they are trained in back over to the location to wait by the door,” Undersheriff Pat Ivey said. “He could have stood there with her, but there was no need to strike her.”

After standing there and watching their fellow officer violently assault a restrained and incapacitated woman, the officers reported Borisade. On Thursday, the JSO announced that he had been fired and charged with battery.

Equally as disturbing as watching a cop pummel a handcuffed woman was the fact that the other officers stood by and allowed it to happen.

“They could have moved in. One officer did at least walk over and put his hand on the officer to stop him from continuing to punch the suspect. So I’m glad one officer did take action,” Gil Smith, News4Jax crime and safety analyst, said. “Now in this particular situation, these other officers do have a person who is handcuffed. So they do have to keep a watch on him, if they engage with this officer no one is watching the prisoner.”

However, the officers certainly were not watching the handcuffed prisoner as they were fixated on watching Borisade beat Martinez to a pulp — not to mention the other prisoner was in a jail and in handcuffs. If he tried to run, he would have quickly been apprehended.

The only officer not at fault in this situation is the one who walked up to Borisade and put his hand on his shoulder to stop him.

Ivey said because Borisade is a probationary officer, he can’t appeal his firing, but he can ask for a name-clearing hearing with JSO, according to News4Jax. If he passes that he would regain the ability to be an officer with another agency.

If history is any indicator, this will be swept under the rug and Borisade will be quietly hired on with another agency.

As New4Jax points out, Borisade should have never been a cop in the first place as he had a criminal record. When he was 19-yeas-old, reports show he took items into a dressing room from a store at the Regency Square Mall and came out without them and tried to leave the store without paying. The report shows he admitted to doing it. He later pleaded no contest.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-cops-fellow-officer-begins-brutally-beating-handcuffed-woman

240 is Back

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2907 on: April 29, 2016, 12:38:18 PM »
Video Shows Cops Do Nothing as Fellow Officer Brutally Beats a Handcuffed Woman

Jacksonville, FL — Mayra Martinez, 31, had a bad first day on the job at the local Scores Bar in Jacksonville. That afternoon, she became intoxicated, quit, and refused to leave, so police were called — this would turn her bad day into a horrifying one.

When police arrived at the bar around 5 p.m., they arrested Martinez and charged her with trespassing and resisting.

According to the police report, Martinez was drunk and belligerent when two officers showed up to remove her from the property. One of those officers was Akinyemi Borisade, 26. When police tried to place her in handcuffs, Martinez tried to kick and bite officers, according to the report. However, as Martinez is much smaller than the two officers who were taking her in, they were easily able to overpower her.

Martinez was then transported to the Duval County jail where things would take a turn for the worse. Video released by the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office shows Martinez attempt to walk over to the officers before Borisade grabs her and slams her into the wall.

After being slammed into the wall by the officer, Borisade proceeded to unleash a fury of fists to the head and face of Martinez after her foot grazed his pant leg.

“He could have turned her around and held her in a transporting position that they are trained in back over to the location to wait by the door,” Undersheriff Pat Ivey said. “He could have stood there with her, but there was no need to strike her.”

After standing there and watching their fellow officer violently assault a restrained and incapacitated woman, the officers reported Borisade. On Thursday, the JSO announced that he had been fired and charged with battery.

Equally as disturbing as watching a cop pummel a handcuffed woman was the fact that the other officers stood by and allowed it to happen.

“They could have moved in. One officer did at least walk over and put his hand on the officer to stop him from continuing to punch the suspect. So I’m glad one officer did take action,” Gil Smith, News4Jax crime and safety analyst, said. “Now in this particular situation, these other officers do have a person who is handcuffed. So they do have to keep a watch on him, if they engage with this officer no one is watching the prisoner.”

However, the officers certainly were not watching the handcuffed prisoner as they were fixated on watching Borisade beat Martinez to a pulp — not to mention the other prisoner was in a jail and in handcuffs. If he tried to run, he would have quickly been apprehended.

The only officer not at fault in this situation is the one who walked up to Borisade and put his hand on his shoulder to stop him.

Ivey said because Borisade is a probationary officer, he can’t appeal his firing, but he can ask for a name-clearing hearing with JSO, according to News4Jax. If he passes that he would regain the ability to be an officer with another agency.

If history is any indicator, this will be swept under the rug and Borisade will be quietly hired on with another agency.

As New4Jax points out, Borisade should have never been a cop in the first place as he had a criminal record. When he was 19-yeas-old, reports show he took items into a dressing room from a store at the Regency Square Mall and came out without them and tried to leave the store without paying. The report shows he admitted to doing it. He later pleaded no contest.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-cops-fellow-officer-begins-brutally-beating-handcuffed-woman


I saw this in my feed this AM.

EVERY cop standing there should be suspended for a few weeks, for witnessing an assault and doing nothing.

This blue shield bullshit...

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2908 on: April 29, 2016, 12:45:01 PM »

I saw this in my feed this AM.

EVERY cop standing there should be suspended for a few weeks, for witnessing an assault and doing nothing.

This blue shield bullshit...

They did not arrest or even try to stop the criminal (the cop) at the spot. They should face actual punishment, not just paid vacation or firing.

240 is Back

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2909 on: April 29, 2016, 12:49:12 PM »
They did not arrest or even try to stop the criminal (the cop) at the spot. They should face actual punishment, not just paid vacation or firing.

they must not have realized they were on video.  IMO, video has changed everything.  cops in my town have gone from being known as rude, to being the most pleasant in the state.  I think adding body cameras had a lot to do with that.  I've chatted with many at shows, I've had them on my block a few times, I've been stopped... always a pleasant experience.   Most cops are hard working schmucks like the rest of us. 

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2910 on: April 29, 2016, 09:10:26 PM »
Innocent Couple Would be In Jail Had they Not Secretly Recorded this Corrupt Cop Extorting Them

Clayton County, GA — An innocent couple exonerated themselves after secretly recording a Clayton County cop trying to shake them down.

Earlier this year, Mike and Michelle Pierce, who run a thrift and salvage business in Griffin, decided to buy a car from an auction; a decision that would later haunt them. It turned out that the car was stolen.

The Pierces had no clue the car they just purchased was stolen, but as soon as they found out it was, they called 9-1-1 and handed the car over. However, after they turned the car over, police gave it back and then arrested them for having it.

“They arrested us in our store in the middle of the day,” said Michael Pierce.

“We didn’t know why. They just threw the cuffs on me and put me in the back of the car,” Michelle Pierce cried as she told WSB-TV her story. “That was the worst thing.”

The gross police incompetence that led to the innocent couple be locked up was only the beginning of their legal debacle with Clayton County police, however.

After being thrown in a cage for a crime they did not commit, the couple learned that an officer, not related at all to their case, Grant Kidd, wanted to talk to them.

“We didn’t want to talk to him because he was a Clayton County officer and we’ve already been arrested for no reason,” Michael Pierce said. “We were scared to (and) scared not to, so we talked about it at the kitchen table with my kids, and my kids said we’d go meet and talk to him, but they were going to film it…to cover our butts in case we got arrested again.”

The decision to record their conversation with officer Kidd would prove to be crucial, as it would have been their word against his otherwise. As the conversation begins, Kidd claims he has someone on the inside of the DA’s office who can get their case thrown out — for a price.

“We ain’t had nothing yet that didn’t go away. If it don’t go away, if it go into the grand jury (inaudible) you get your money back,” said Kidd. “You’ll never see him. He (inaudible) actually works with the DA in the office.”

Mr. Pierce then asked, “And we won’t get in trouble for bribing?”

“No,” Kidd replied. “You ain’t never going to talk to him.”

“It’s unbelievable,” said attorney Lee Sexton who represented the Pierces in their criminal case.

After the recording, the charges were dismissed. That’s when the FBI launched their investigation into Kidd.

Of course, Clayton County District Attorney Tracy Lawson denies that Kidd had any contacts within the office. But in the conversation, it sounded like this was a frequent practice for this corrupt cop.

“Any conceivable reason he could be saying that?” WSB-TV reporter asked Clayton County Police Chief Michael Register. “No,” said the chief. “It certainly is a conversation from my standpoint that just turns your stomach.”

“Instances such as this undermine public trust and confidence in our judicial system,” said attorney Darryl Scott. “Their sense of security has been violated, and they did exactly what they were supposed to do by contacting law enforcement, and it backfired.”

To say that this instance undermines the trust is accurate and the reason for so much of the divide in America today. Law enforcement in this country, we are told, is composed of heroic men and women who put their lives on the line every single day to maintain order. However, this case, and many more like it, sends this fantastical facade crumbling to the ground.

In an interview with WSB-TV, Cheif Register summed it up perfectly by stating that this is “another reason people feel the way they do about law enforcement.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/innocent-couple-jail-secretly-recorded-corrupt-cop-extorting/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2911 on: April 30, 2016, 12:29:09 AM »
"Apologized"...

SWAT Raids Family, Terrorizes Disabled Woman & Arrests Family Members — Whoops, Wrong House

Philadelphia, PA – Police apologized on Wednesday after raiding an innocent family’s home and traumatizing a disabled woman who nearly fell down the stairs. Touted as “innovative” and “state-of-the-art,” the Real Time Crime Center mistakenly directed officers to the wrong house and another botched raid.

Around 2:30 a.m. on Wednesday, cops suddenly broke down the Jardine family’s door and raided their home while holding them at gunpoint. Despite the fact that the family had committed no crime, officers ordered them out of their rooms and placed them in handcuffs during the middle of the night.

“I’m coming out of the shower, and there’s a Pump Action Rifle to my chest,” Angel Jardine told WPVI. “He’s just like, ‘Put your hands up.’ Rifle in my chest, and I’m like, ‘Whoa.’”

Physically impaired after an ex-boyfriend shot her in the head, forty-eight-year-old Ronik Jardine had been asleep in her bed when the cops woke her up and immediately ordered her out of the room.

“He said, ‘Go down the steps. Go down the steps now.’ I said, ‘Officer, I’m handicap.’” recalled Ronik Jardine. “He still didn’t care that I was handicap. They almost made me fall down the steps.”

After taking some family members into custody and interrogating them, the police concluded they had raided the wrong residence and apologized. According to Michael Jardine, an officer told him that it was a case of mistaken identity and offered to give them a ride back home.

“I just still feel like it shouldn’t have never gotten that far, you coming in our house drawing guns,” said Michael Jardine.

Ironically, the police claim they were searching for armed suspects committing violent home invasions when the cops mistakenly broke down the Jardine’s door. Described as “an innovative unit that provides real time analytical and investigative support to the Philadelphia Police Department,” the Real Time Crime Center reportedly reviewed surveillance video that led the heavily armed officers into raiding the wrong home.
On the Philadelphia Police Department’s website, they boast, “Video feeds from city of Philadelphia, SEPTA, and independent businesses cameras are available for monitoring around the clock, by staff in the Real Time Crime Center.”

Equipped with disturbingly Orwellian technology, the police still managed to raid the wrong home and terrify an innocent family in the middle of the night at gunpoint.
“I’m scared of guns,” Ronik Jardine told WPVI. “It traumatized me so bad, I had to go to the doctor this morning.”

Earlier this year, a police flashbang grenade disfigured the face and melted the hand of a former Miss Australia during an early morning drug raid. In May 2014, a police flashbang grenade landed in 19-month-old Bounkham Phonesavanh’s crib and blew a hole in the baby’s face and chest, covering him in third-degree burns.

Just past midnight on May 16, 2010, a Detroit SWAT team tossed a flashbang grenade into the living room where 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones had been sleeping on the couch. As the flashbang incinerated her blanket, Aiyana was immediately shot in the head by Officer Joseph Weekley. Weekley claimed that Aiyana’s grandmother had reached for his weapon, but ballistics and another officer’s testimony refute his accusations. Police later realized they had forcibly entered the wrong apartment. The suspect, Chauncey Owens, lived upstairs.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-raid-wrong-home-terrorize-innocent-disabled-woman/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2912 on: May 02, 2016, 01:41:12 AM »
San Diego Cop Negligently Fires at Baby Crib Less Than a Year After Killing Unarmed Man

In April 2015, San Diego police Neal “Nick” Browder shot and killed a homeless man in an alleyway after claiming the man came charging at him with a knife.

Surveillance video eventually proved that Fridoon Rawshan Nehad not only did not charge at Browder, he was only carrying a pen.

But Browder was cleared anyway because he uttered the magic words that he was in fear for his life.

More recently on February 20, 2016, Browder was searching the home of a probationer when he “accidentally” fired his gun, sending a bullet through a baby crib.

Fortunately, the crib was empty, but that incident was enough for San Diego police to take him off the streets and reassign him to a desk job, which is meant to be some type of disciplinary action for the cop who made more than $150,000 in pay and benefits in 2014.

ABC 10 broke the story after receiving a tip from a source, reaching out to the police union and Browder’s lawyer, but receiving no comment.

Negligent shootings, which police refer to as “accidental shootings,” are quite common among police officers despite the belief that they are highly trained professionals when it comes to firearms.

Last December, a cop in California said he accidentally fired when was pulled out his gun and shot a man who was climbing out of a rollover accident after a pursuit.

Initially, Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey said he would not file charges against Paradise police officer Patrick Feaster because he believed he never meant to shoot and kill him.

But after a national backlash, Ramsey filed involuntary manslaughter charges against Feaster.

Then there was New York City police officer Peter Liang who negligently fired a gun in a dark stairwell, killing a man named Akai Gurley who was doing nothing but walking downstairs with his girlfriend because the elevator in their building was not working.

Liang was convicted of manslaughter but last month received probation.

And let’s not forget the Florida campus cop who negligently fired his gun earlier this week, leaving a bullet hole in the roof of his patrol car.

But back to Browder.

After killing Nehad, he told fellow officers that he did not see a weapon, so maybe it was another negligent shooting. It was only after he was allowed to watch the surveillance video that he changed his story, claiming he thought the pen was a knife.

But just because Browder was allowed to watch the video prior to giving an official statement does not mean the video was released to the public.

No, that took another eight months with San Diego police saying releasing the video would place officers’ lives at risk. And it was only released after Browder had been cleared of any wrongdoing.

Nehad’s family has filed a lawsuit against the department over the shooting, which is still pending.

Generally speaking, when a cop is assigned to desk duty, he is stripped of his badge and gun and authority to make arrests.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/san-diego-cop-negligently-fires-at-baby-crib-less-than-a-year-after-killing-unarmed-man/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2913 on: May 04, 2016, 02:13:57 PM »
Horrifying Dashcam Shows Psycho Cops Laugh as they Pepper Spray a Baby, Beat Her Innocent Mom

Chicago, IL — A mother travelling with her two small children in her car tried to pull into her driveway when they crossed paths with two psychotic Chicago cops. The interaction would end with an innocent woman being dragged from her car, her and her children doused in pepper spray, and this mother of two facing attempted murder charges.

The nightmare unfolded for this mom, who is also a local Reverend, back in 2013. Rev. Catherine Brown was returning home, about to pull into her driveway, when a police cruiser with no lights or sirens on came barrelling down her alleyway. Had Brown not proactively honked her horn, the police cruiser would have likely smashed into her car head on.

“It’s a blessing I did blow my horn,” said Brown, recalling that fateful night.

However, the blessing of stopping a head on collision would quickly morph into a horrifying experience. Inside the police cruiser were Officer Michelle Morsi Murphy and Officer Jose Lopez, who were blocking Brown from entering the driveway to her home.

Seemingly to proud to back up and let the mother and her two children pull into their house, officer Murphy jumped out of the vehicle and began swearing at Brown demanding she move her vehicle.

Before she can even respond, Lopez rushes the innocent mother and children with his gun drawn and aims it at Brown’s head. Remember, she had done absolutely nothing wrong.

“It startled me,” Brown says. “I reached for my license … The other officer takes the gun and points it at the front of my head.”

Fearing that these maniacs might hurt her and her children, Brown called 9-1-1, repeatedly. The recordings of those calls reveal that she was being terrorized and threatened. She begged for a police lieutenant to come to the scene.

Brown’s oldest daughter Georgia was 8-years-old at the time, and when asked what she thought the cops were going to do, she responded by saying, “they might shoot and kill us.”

Instead of waiting for their lieutenant to show up, Brown’s attackers, two of Chicago’s finest tried to force open her door. Terrified that these sociopaths might kill her, Brown drove backwards out of the alley and began screaming to her neighbors for help.

“Now she’s chasing me with the car. I come to a complete stop, and then she takes the car and rams it into me,” Brown says.

The dashcam video of the rest of incident is nothing short of infuriating and horrifying. After smashing the cruiser into a car full of children, Officer Murphy jumps out and begins dousing Brown with pepper spray. Murphy was so careless that she sprayed Brown’s small baby too.

After hitting her with a chemical agent, Murphy held her pistol to Brown’s head as another officer approached and began smashing her car with a baton. Both cops then violently pull the mom out of the car as her children scream in terror.

To illustrate the sadistic nature of these cops, the video even catches officer Lopez smiling as he beats down this innocent woman.

They “Beat me down to my underwear, pulled my skirt off me,” Brown says. “They beat me with the sticks and hit me with their boots in my head.”

After assaulting and arresting an innocent mother in front of her own children, police then charged Brown with attempted murder because Murphy claimed she was dragged as Brown tried to flee. However, after going to trial for the incident, Brown was found not guilty as there was no evidence of Murphy ever being in danger.

Brown was still convicted of reckless conduct for driving backwards, but she has appealed that charge as well. Any sane person will see that she did so to avoid these two savage public servants.

Brown’s attorney, Ed Fox pulled the records from The Citizens Police Data Project, which shows the outright insane history of these two Chicago cops. Morsi Murphy has been hit with a whopping 19 complaints, and Lopez has received even more at 21.

The disturbing video below shows the dangerous power of belligerent and violent individuals being given badges. Had the dashcam video of this incident not existed, Brown could be rotting in a jail right now, serving time for an attempted murder that she never committed.

The Chicago police have declined to comment on the case because of the pending legal action against them by Brown. They only released the following canned statement:
“Reaffirming our commitment to accountability and integrity is paramount in our efforts to rebuild trust between police officers and communities,” the spokesperson said in a prepared statement. “Since there is pending litigation in this case, CPD is not able to comment on specifics. However, we take allegations of excessive force and discourtesy very seriously. These matters are thoroughly investigated by the Independent Review Authority and individuals are held accountable when wrongdoing is discovered.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrifying-dashcam-shows-psycho-cops-laugh-pepper-spray-baby-beat-innocent-mom/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2914 on: May 06, 2016, 12:29:49 AM »
Remember this case?

Cop Assaults Disabled Combat Vet on Video for Legally Parking in Handicap Spot and Keeps His Job

Riviera Beach, FL — After his gross incompetence led him to assault an innocent disabled veteran, Sgt. Gary Wilson with the Riviera Beach police department was charged with misdemeanor battery and criminal mischief. However, because police in America are subject to a different set of rules and held to lower standards, Wilson was found not guilty of battery — in spite of the entire assault being recorded.

During the trial, Wilson told the jury that it was James’ fault he assaulted him because he responded with hostility when being accused of a crime he didn’t commit.

“He immediately started cursing me,” Wilson said of James. “I don’t think it was warranted.”

Isiah James is a combat veteran who served two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan. During his deployment, James took fire and was hit with a blast from an IED, which left him medically discharged and permanently disabled.

Because of his disability, Florida issued James a handicap hanging tag since he has trouble walking long distances. However, James’ disability was not an issue with Officer Wilson of the Riviera Beach police department.

Upon pulling into a Walgreen’s parking lot last year, James was confronted by this officer who was on a mission to harass. Officer Wilson confronted James and became not only verbally abusive but physically too.
Luckily for James, he recorded the assault.

“Officer, I’m a damned disabled veteran,” James explains to Wilson, who thinks he’s captured some criminal mastermind. However, James is squeaky clean.

While trying to tell Wilson that he is disabled, and his handicap tag is legitimate, Wilson slaps the phone out of his hand subsequently cracking the screen.

After being physically assaulted by Wilson, James proceeds to unleash a verbal lashing fit for its recipient. The resultant video is as infuriating as it is encouraging as James stood his ground and refused to be bullied by this cop who had nothing better to do.

For endangering an innocent man’s life and assaulting him for no reason, officer Wilson will not face consequences. In fact, after proving he is unfit to wear a badge and carry a gun, Wilson remains on the job.
Sadly, the treatment James received is anything but an isolated incident. Veterans are often the targets of police officer aggression.

Last year, we reported on the story of Anthony Hill, 27, who was gunned down by a police officer during a psychotic breakdown. Hill was completely naked and unarmed when he was killed.

Before the Hill incident, a Louisiana cop was indicted after surveillance video showed him gun down an unarmed veteran outside of a West Monroe gas station.

The list goes on.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-assaults-disabled-combat-vet-video-legally-parking-handicap-spot-job/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2915 on: May 06, 2016, 01:53:19 AM »
New Jersey Cops Arrest Woman for Remaining Silent Before Reading Her Rights

New Jersey state police arrested a woman for exercising her Constitutional right to remain silent.

Or as they called it; “obstruction.”

But they were sure to inform Rebecca Musarra that she had the right to remain silent – once she was handcuffed and placed in the back of the patrol car.

She was then transported to a local police department, but released two hours later with no charges against her after a supervisor reviewed the footage and chalked it up to a rookie mistake.

The two arresting officer, Matthew Stazzone and Demetric Gosa, were hired in 2014.

Now Musarra is suing.

The incident took place on October 16, but a dash cam video of the incident was just obtained by NJ Advance Media, which posted it today.

Musarra, an attorney from Philadalphia, was pulled over for speeding. He walked up to her car and asked for her drivers license, registration and proof of insurance.

“While you’re looking for that, do you know why you’re being pulled over tonight?” he asked.

She handed over her documents, but remained silent.

But Stazzone wanted her to answer the question, so he asked her again. And again. And again.

“Do you know why you’re being stopped tonight?”

When she continued to remain silent, he threatened to arrest her.

“You’re going to be placed under arrest if you don’t answer my questions,” he said.

She then told him she was an attorney, exercising her right to remain silent.

But that did not stop them from ordering her out of the car and handcuffing her.

“Are you detaining me because I refused to speak?” she asked as they walked her to the police car.

“Yeah,” Stazzone said.

“Yeah, obstruction,” Gosa added.

At the police station, she was patted down and handcuffed to a bench inside a cell, according to NJ.com.

Musarra’s father is a former prosecutor and her mother is a former probation officer, so she told the news site that she understands “cops have a difficult job to do,” she told NJ.com.

But she also said “there has to be some sort of accountability.”

“Who knows what will happen to the next person who comes down the road who decides they have these constitutional rights they want to assert?” Musarra said.

“What happens to them when they don’t have the sort of privileges I have?”

What would have happened is that they would still be fighting the charges.

Read her lawsuit here.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/new-jersey-cops-arrest-woman-for-remaining-silent-before-reading-her-rights/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2916 on: May 11, 2016, 03:08:12 PM »
South Carolina Cop Who Shot and Killed Walter Scott Now Facing Federal Charges

Four months after he was released from jail on bond, a South Carolina cop who shot and killed a man who was running away from him, only to claim he had been charging at him, is expected to be jailed again.

But this time on federal charges.

Michael Slager, the North Charleston police officer who killed Walter Scott in 2015 in an incident captured on video by a bystander, was indicted this week by a federal grand jury on three charges.

According to the Washington Post:

In the indictment filed Tuesday, the grand jury accuses Michael Slager, a former North Charleston police officer, of depriving Scott of his rights under color of law. The grand jury said that when Slager shot Scott “without legal justification” in April 2015, he took away his constitutional right “to be free from the use of unreasonable force by a law enforcement officer.”

Slager is also charged with obstruction of justice, with the grand jury saying that he knowingly misled state investigators by telling them that that Scott, who was not armed, was approaching him with a Taser. He was also charged with one count of using a weapon during “a felony crime of violence.”

In convicted, Slater could be sentenced to life in prison. But because there are no minimum sentences for the charges, he could also wind up on probation.

He is also still awaiting trial on state murder charges, which could also land him with a life sentence.

The fact that federal prosecutors decided to pursue charges against him is a rarity considering the U.S. Department of Justice declined to take 96 percent of cases involving law enforcement officers since 1995, according to a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review investigation.

But few cases are as cut and dry as this one.

The incident took place in April 2015 when Slager pulled Scott over for a broken tail light, resulting in Scott running away from the scene to avoid being incarcerated for missed child support payments.

Slager began chasing him through a field, then pulled out his gun and shot him several times.

Then he walked up to the body and dropped his taser gun next to it.

And then he claimed that Scott had charged him, trying to pry the stun gun from his hands while beating him.

But it was all being recorded by a man with a camera.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/south-carolina-cop-who-shot-and-killed-fleeing-man-now-facing-federal-charges/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2917 on: May 11, 2016, 03:10:54 PM »
Illinois Police Arrest Man for Felony Wiretapping After He Recorded Them in His Home

An Illinois man was arrested on felony eavesdropping charges after informing police he was recording them in his own home over the weekend.

New Lenox police claim Daniel Murphy made this announcement while “surreptitiously recording” them, which is legal jargon for secretly recording

Nevertheless, the arrest of the 25-year-old man raises legal questions about the state’s new and improved eavesdropping law, which replaced the previous Draconian law that was ruled unconstitutional in 2014 after numerous citizens were arrested for recording police in the line of duty.

Not much different than how Murphy was arrested.

The questions are:

Do police have an expectation of privacy in the home of a person they are investigating?

Can a person be surreptitiously recording while publicly announcing he is recording?

Did Illinois legislators surreptitiously amend the new eavesdropping law  to provide more protections to citizens recording police in the line of duty?

According to local news reports, police had responded to Murphy’s New Lenox home to investigate a “domestic disturbance.”

“While handling the domestic, Murphy informed the officers that he was surreptitiously recording the officers,” police told Patch.
 
Neither the Patch article or the WJOL News goes into much detail about the incident and no other media has reported on the arrest yet.

All we know is that he was also charged with simple assault and felony eavesdropping on Sunday.

And on Monday, he was charged with felony aggravated battery to a peace officer and misdemeanor false report to a public safety agency, according to WJOL, which said it does not know if the latter charges are related to the former charges.

We have reached out to Murphy on Facebook for comment but he has not yet responded, so perhaps he is still in jail.

Now let’s take a look at the new eavesdropping law, which went into effect in January 2015 under much controversy and confusion.

We tried to clear up some of the confusion here, even though we acknowledged it was vaguely written, considering (or maybe because) how much taxpayers paid to defend the old law.

The new law did not even specify that citizens were now legally allowed to record cops, which was the whole point of ACLU vs. Alvarez, the lawsuit where Cook County State Attorney Anita Alvarez fought tooth and nail to keep it illegal to record cops.

She not only lost that costly battle but ended up losing the election last March.

The vagueness of the bill was done on purpose, according to the Chicago Reader.

In the era of Ferguson and “I can’t breathe,” can Illinois citizens now record police officers in action? The ACLU says yes: the new law “respects” an appellate court ruling that cops on duty have “no reasonable expectation of privacy in their conversations in public places.” You won’t find that language in the law itself, however.

State representative Elaine Nekritz, who sponsored the bill in the house, says that’s no accident. We made a decision “not to specifically state that citizens can record cops,” Nekritz says. “I thought if we tried to describe every instance in which you either were or were not committing eavesdropping, we would run into more trouble than we’ve created by having this more general standard. We just can’t write every circumstance in which someone has a reasonable expectation of privacy.” Like the definition of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, she says, “we know it when we see it.”

Fortunately, an Illinois legislator named Elgie R. Sims, Jr. added a paragraph to the law, which went into effect in June 2015, stating the following:

Nothing in this Article shall prohibit any individual, not a law enforcement officer, from recording a law enforcement officer in the performance of his or her duties in a public place or in circumstances in which the officer has no reasonable expectation of privacy. However, an officer may take reasonable action to maintain safety and control, secure crime scenes and accident sites, protect the integrity and confidentiality of investigations, and protect the public safety and order.

Sims slipped the passage into a larger police reform bill addressing police body cameras that he and a state senator named Kwame Y. Raoul sponsored, which also states:

No officer may hinder or prohibit any person, not a law enforcement officer, from recording a law enforcement officer in the performance of his or her duties in a public place or when the officer has no reasonable expectation of privacy. The law enforcement agency’s written policy shall indicate the potential criminal penalties, as well as any departmental discipline, which may result from unlawful confiscation or destruction of the recording medium of a person who is not a law enforcement officer. However, an officer may take reasonable action to maintain safety and control, secure crime scenes and accident sites, protect the integrity and confidentiality of investigations, and protect the public safety and order.

So let’s get back to the questions.

Do police have an expectation of privacy in the home of a person they are investigating?

Although a person’s home is not public, police have no expectation of privacy from the residents of that home when they are on duty and investigating a potential crime, unless one of them decides to use the restroom and shuts the door behind them to take care of personal business.

Can a person be surreptitiously recording while publicly announcing he is recording?

Like the Massachusetts wiretapping law, the Illinois eavesdropping law makes it clear that citizens are not allowed to surreptitiously record others, even if they have no expectation of privacy, which is not the case in other all-party consent states, which only make it a crime if you secretly record somebody who has an expectation of privacy.

And this provision also applies to police officers wearing body cameras, who are required to inform citizens who have an expectation of privacy that they are being recorded.

However, the law states that officers must record proof of this warning, which means the cameras need to be turned on before they inform citizens that they are being recorded.

The officer must provide notice of recording to any person if the person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and proof of notice must be evident in the recording. If exigent circumstances exist which prevent the officer from providing notice, notice must be provided as soon as practicable.

Police will no doubt argue that Murphy was interfering with the “integrity and confidentiality” of an investigation.

But considering he is the one being accused of creating a domestic disturbance, he should have a Constitutional right to record police in his own home if that could be the determining factor whether he is innocent or guilty.

Did Illinois legislators surreptitiously amend the new eavesdropping law to provide more protections to citizens recording police in the line of duty?

The amendment that citizens can record police was overshadowed by the police reform bill, which mostly addressed body cameras.

According to the Chicago Daily Law Review:

Lawmakers on Saturday overwhelmingly approved a package of rules for police body cameras that also requires independent investigations of officer-involved citizen deaths, creates a process for appointing special prosecutors and bulks up data-collection efforts on police stops and misconduct.

Senate Bill 1304, which the Senate approved on a 45-5 vote, was a direct response to national controversies over use-of-force policies after officer-involved deaths of unarmed black citizens in New York City; Ferguson, Mo., and other places.

The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Kwame Y. Raoul and Rep. Elgie R. Sims Jr. — both Chicago Democrats — was approved by the House on a 107-3 vote earlier last week amid contentious budget talks that have forced legislators to schedule session days beyond their normally scheduled May 31 adjournment.

The law wouldn’t force departments to use body cameras. Instead, it would rely on a $5 hike to all traffic tickets issued in Illinois to create a grant program that subsidizes the cost for departments to opt in to the program.

Raoul said part of the reason the bill doesn’t require camera use was that, even with some added revenue from ticket fees, it would have been too costly for the state to mandate them for every department.

“One thing I think is that it’s going to, in short time, be so widely used voluntarily that at that point we can cross that road,” he said today. “But, at this point, this state is obviously dealing with a resource challenge.”

The bill also bans police chokeholds — the tactic that caused an outcry when police used it in a confrontation that killed an unarmed New York City man last year.

And, in light of confusion over a state eavesdropping law that went into effect in December, the bill clarifies that citizens can record police when officers have no “reasonable expectation” of privacy.

And that final sentence was pretty much all the media coverage the amendment to the eavesdropping law received at the time, which goes to show just how short attention spans tend to be in the media.

So back to Daniel Murphy, who is facing two felonies from what started out as a misdemeanor domestic disturbance call and who may still be sitting in jail.

We have very little details to go on at the moment, but it is unlikely the eavesdropping charge will stick considering the circumstances.

And it’s rare that police would tack on a felony assaulting an officer charge a day after the initial arrest.

Of course, anything can happen once they order you to stop recording.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/illinois-police-arrest-man-for-felony-wiretapping-for-recording-them-in-his-home/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2918 on: May 12, 2016, 03:39:29 PM »
California Deputies Charged in Viral Video Beating; More Deputies Facing Charges for Coverup

A pair of California deputies who were caught on camera viciously beating a suspect with their batons after chasing him for several miles were charged with multiple felonies Tuesday.

And more Alameda County sheriff’s deputies may be charged in the coming weeks for taking part in the ensuing coverup, including one deputy accused of stealing money and gold from the victim and giving it to a homeless couple in exchange for their silence as well as supervisors allowing the two deputies to revise their reports once the video had surfaced.

It all took place on November 12, 2015 when Alameda County sheriff deputies Luis Santamaria and Paul Wieber – not realizing they were on camera – struck the suspect 30 times in a 40-second span in a San Francisco alleyway.

“Get on the fucking ground,” one of them can be heard saying while beating the suspect who was already on the ground.

“I’m sorry. Oh my God, help me,” pleaded Stanislav Petrov, who was accused of stealing a car, then striking two sheriff patrol cars, leaving a deputy with minor injuries.

He then led deputies on a pursuit through the streets of Oakland before crossing the bay into San Francisco.

The owner of the camera, who is remaining anonymous, submitted the video to the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office, which released it four days after the incident.

That was when Santamaria and Wieber were allowed to revise their reports, claiming Petrov was resisting and that they were in fear for their safety as well as the safety of the community.

The initial report was apparently destroyed.


The two deputies are charged with assault under color of authority, battery with serious bodily injury and assault with a deadly weapon.

And other deputies will likely be charged with making false statements, theft, bribery and witness tampering, according to the San Francisco Examiner.

The deputy who tried to bribe the homeless couple is Shawn Osborne, who is on paid administrative leave.

Meanwhile, no charges have been filed against Petrov, who was left with broken bones in both hands, deep cuts in his head and mild traumatic brain injury.

He is, however, facing unrelated drug and gun charges after an FBI raid in his apartment in March.

Prosecutors say that none of the deputies involved in the chase, including the multitude that arrived after the initial beating, had activated their body cameras during the pursuit except one, who turned it on by accident.

That footage, which has not been released, is now part of the investigation.

Both Santamaria and Wieber turned themselves in today and were released on bail.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/california-deputies-charged-in-viral-video-beating-more-deputies-facing-charges-for-coverup/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2919 on: May 13, 2016, 09:26:53 AM »
Alabama Cop Who Paralyzed Indian Man Cleared of State Criminal Charges After Two Federal Mistrials

The Alabama cop who left an Indian grandfather paralyzed because he chose to stroll through his son’s neighborhood without knowing how to speak English is no longer facing state criminal charges.

Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange apparently figured it was pointless to proceed with assault charges against Madison police officer Eric Parker considering two federal trials resulted in two mistrials.

“After a careful review of the witness testimony included in 2,000 pages of federal trial transcripts and a re-evaluation of the evidence, we are seeking to dismiss State charges against Mr. Parker,” Strange stated in a press release today.

But all it takes is a cursory review of the dash cam video from the February 6, 2015 incident below to show Parker is another power-drunk thug of a cop.

Parker’s defenders will say that Sureshbhai Patel deserved what he got because he was walking through the neighborhood peering into garages.

But even if he was doing that, he was doing it from the public sidewalk he was walking on.

Besides, having just arrived from India to visit his family, he was probably curious at how different things are here.  And probably figured he was free to do that considering how much the United States hypes its freedom to the world.

But curiosity is just another word for suspicious in the eyes of police. And freedom takes a back seat to police in this country as we learn daily.

Parker, who was 26 years old, testified that he felt threatened by the 57 year old man.

And he gave the old spiel about fearing for his life because Patel had his hands in his pockets, which Parker called “passive resistance” – failing to see the irony in that is exactly what Gandhi practiced, who just happens to be another frail, Indian man, one who happened to preach non-violence.

Martin Luther King, Jr. also practiced passive resistance, but that was also met with violence from police in Alabama.

But unlike Gandhi and King, Patel was not even protesting. He was not out to make change.

He was just out for a stroll.

According to WHNT19:

Parker testified Patel gave indications from his behavior that he posed a threat to Parker and the officer he was training.

That included Patel repeatedly walking away from the officers when they approached to investigate possible trespassing as well as putting his hands in his pocket, described as ‘passive resistance.’

Parker told jurors he did not use a ‘leg sweep’ to ground Patel, saying when he shifted his weight to take Patel down, he lost his balance and both men fell to the ground.

Parker said Patel pulled his left hand away four times while he was trying to control them. He said the fourth time resulted in the takedown.

Parker reiterated several times throughout his testimony during prosecution’s questioning that the actions he took were in the interest of officer safety. On responding to a call about a suspicious man lurking in the neighborhood and look into garages, Parker said “I was there to investigate.”

Parker has been on paid administrative leave since the incident, but now that he is free from all charges, he will likely return to his beat to keep the neighborhoods safe from people like Patel, who arrive in this country without learning English.

“When you come to the U.S. we expect you to follow our laws and speak our language,” said (Parker’s defense attorney) Robert Tuten. “Mr. Patel bears as much responsibility for this as anyone.”

The federal judge who dismissed his case earlier this year agreed with Parker’s attorneys that Patel committed a crime by walking out of the house without identification.

However, Madison Police Chief Larry Muncey was outraged at the incident and fired Parker, but Parker appealed, which is why he is on paid leave.

And Muncey was found guilty of contempt of court when a federal judge discovered he had questioned his officers about their testimony.

Muncey sent emails demanding to know why some of his officers who were called as witnesses had testified that the takedown was within policy. Muncey, who said he had a duty as chief to correct his officers, was found guilty last month of criminal contempt of court and fined $2,500.

Muncey is now on paid administrative leave as he appeals the decision.

So to sum it up, the only person convicted from this incident was the guy who wanted to fire Parker for his actions.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/alabama-cop-paralyzed-indian-man-cleared-state-criminal-charges-two-federal-mistrials/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2920 on: May 14, 2016, 01:43:36 AM »
Gang of Cops Choke Innocent Man Unconscious Because There Was a Beer Can in the Parking Lot

San Leandro, CA – In a blatant abuse of authority, San Leandro police officers were caught on body cam video choking an innocent man unconscious and arresting him under false pretenses. Although the suspect was charged with resisting arrest, driving under the influence, and multiple weapons violations, the district attorney later dismissed all of the charges against him.

In January 2015, San Leandro Police Officers Michael Olivera and Alexander Ying approached 51-year-old Douglas Babbitt, who was sitting in his vehicle while speaking to a friend on his cell phone. Spotting a beer bottle in the 7-Eleven parking lot, Olivera began interrogating Babbitt despite the fact that the officer had no probable cause to believe that the beer belonged to Babbitt.

“Did I say it was your beer?” Olivera asked.

“Yeah, you asked me if it was my beer,” Babbitt responded.

“Alright,” Olivera offered.

“So how am I gonna put a beer way over there when I’m sitting over here?” Babbitt asked.

“Well, who does it belong to?” Olivera retorted.

“Why don’t you ask the person who put it there?” Babbitt retaliated. “Because I don’t know.”

“Well, do you know who put it there?” Olivera tried again.

“No,” Babbitt calmly answered. “Anything else you want to ask me?”

“No,” Olivera lied, “But why you so aggravated?”

“’Cause you come asking about a beer that wasn’t mine,” Babbitt replied.

Although Babbitt handed over his driver’s license and offered to take a breathalyzer, Olivera instead suddenly grabbed Babbitt’s arm and handcuffed his wrist before aggressively twisting his arm.
“I’m not gonna resist,” Babbitt could be heard on police body cam video. “Why are you searching?”

An unidentified officer smashed Babbitt’s passenger window for no apparent reason while Olivera continued twisting his handcuffed arm. As Babbitt peacefully exited the vehicle, several officers tackled him to the ground while incessantly repeating, “Stop resisting! Stop resisting!”

According to Olivera’s body cam video, Babbitt did not appear to resist and actually lost consciousness as one of the officers applied a carotid restraint, or chokehold, used to prevent blood from passing through the carotid artery. After twitching and convulsing for a few moments, Babbitt finally regained consciousness with several stupefied cops standing over his body.

“You just passed me out,” Babbitt told the overzealous cops.

“Yeah, you’re alright,” an officer without any medical knowledge responded.

“I have to sit up,” Babbitt pleaded. “I can barely breathe.”

After transporting Babbitt to the hospital, police found a knife and four firearms inside his vehicle. Accused by officers of smelling like alcohol with bloodshot eyes, Babbitt was arrested and charged with resisting arrest, driving under the influence of alcohol, and multiple weapons violations. The Alameda County District Attorney’s office later dismissed the charges after watching the video and discovering that a toxicology report found Babbitt did not have any alcohol in his system that night.

According to Babbitt, the former Army reservist has repeatedly been followed and questioned by San Leandro police, but this was his first arrest. In July 2015, Babbitt filed a lawsuit accusing the officers of violating his constitutional rights and using excessive force, while unlawfully arresting and falsely imprisoning him.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-cops-choke-innocent-man-unconscious-reason/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2921 on: May 14, 2016, 11:32:43 PM »
This man was looking at up to 10 years in prison because of those cops. These criminal cops should face at least 10 years of prison.

Man Exonerated and Cops Exposed as Lying Thugs After Video Surfaces Refuting ‘Official’ Story

San Francisco, CA – Caught on video assaulting a man and later lying to justify his actions, a San Francisco police officer was accused of perjury before a federal judge dismissed the case against his arrestee. Although officers eventually discovered a handgun on the suspect, the judge determined that the police had no legitimate reason to attack and search him.

On December 1, 2015, a surveillance camera captured roughly a dozen men playing an illegal dice game on the corner when a patrol car suddenly pulled up next to them. As many of the men calmly stood up and began walking away, Officer Nicholas Buckley and his partner exited their vehicle while immediately confronting people on the sidewalk.

According to Buckley’s report and testimony, Brandon Simpson ignored several commands to stop while concealing his hands under his coat and near his waist. Acting aggressively, Simpson allegedly attempted to “sprint away up the hill” before Buckley tackled him along with other officers and subdued Simpson on the ground.

But surveillance video from a nearby nonprofit housing building revealed that Simpson had been walking in Buckley’s general direction with his hands clearly visible when the officer abruptly assaulted him. Although Buckley admitted to punching Simpson twice, one of the officers in the video can be seen punching Simpson at least eight times.

Despite the fact that Simpson did not appear to fight back, several cops tackled him to the ground and subdued him. After finding a loaded handgun on him, the police arrested Simpson and charged him with possession of a gun while on probation for a prior felony. On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed the case against Simpson after watching a video of the incident.

“The worst thing in the world is the prosecution and conviction of an innocent person, or a conviction based on perjured testimony,” Judge Breyer stated after dropping the charges against Simpson. “The affront is to all of us… I am not enraged, but I am deeply saddened.”

During Simpson’s recent trial, Buckley falsely testified to witnessing Simpson’s aggressive behavior and attempt to flee. But after watching the surveillance video of Simpson’s arrest, Breyer dismissed the federal charges against him on Thursday while publicly accusing Buckley of committing perjury.

“The video was unequivocal in rebutting everything the police officer testified to — at least to all the pertinent details,” Breyer admitted after dismissing the case.

Facing up to 10 years in prison based on a cop’s false testimony, Simpson walked out of court a free man, while Breyer ordered prosecutors to give copies of the video to San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr. Even though cops are rarely charged with perjury, District Attorney George Gascón has received pressure to prosecute Buckley and his partner, Officer John Fergus, with committing perjury under oath.

“Video has become a champion of justice,” declared Public Defender Jeff Adachi. “They should be charged with perjury.”



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/judge-dismisses-case-accusing-cop-lying/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2922 on: May 15, 2016, 12:50:59 PM »
Los Angeles Deputies Forced to Release Handcuffed Man when Cop Watchers Catch them Making Unlawful Arrest

Spotting a man riding a bicycle on a sidewalk, Los Angeles sheriff’s deputies sprung into action and stopped their car, ordering the man off his bicycle.

They then handcuffed Ricky Munday and frisked him, telling him he was breaking the law.

But two of Munday’s friends – also riding on the sidewalk – came riding up on the scene with their cameras recording, telling the deputies they had no grounds to detain him because they were out of their jurisdiction.

“Fuck you, you can’t ride a bike on the sidewalk,” shouted Daniel Saulmon aka Tom Zebra.

“What city are we in ? Tell me the ordinance. Why are you handcuffing him?”

Turns out, the deputies were wrong to detain him because it is not illegal to ride a bicycle on the sidewalk within Los Angeles city limits.

But it is illegal to do so in the unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County.

And it apparently is such a serious offense that people need to be handcuffed and frisked.

The incident took place earlier this month on Vermont Avenue, which serves as a border between city and county. The east side, where the detainment took place, is within the city. The west side is county.

But when Saulmon and his friend, Katman, began berating the cops for unlawfully detaining their friend, several more sheriff patrol cars sped up.

Eventually, at least five patrol cars had pulled up to the scene with at least ten deputies – all for three men riding their bikes on the sidewalk.

But the deputies eventually became aware that they were detaining a man who had broken no law and released him.

The first video below is Katman’s, and it is the best quality. The second video is Munday’s, and shows the initial detainment just before the 4:30 mark.

And the last video is Zebra’s.







https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/05/los-angeles-deputies-forced-to-release-handcuffed-man-when-cop-watchers-catch-them-making-unlawful-arrest/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2923 on: May 16, 2016, 11:58:33 PM »
Cops Kill Unarmed Man on Body Cam — But There Was No Investigation Since Cops Didn’t Fire a Shot

Hayward, CA — A routine traffic stop by BART police officers quickly turned deadly for a California father after police escalated force to the point he suffocated to death. After filing a lawsuit, the family has chosen to make the body camera footage public.

On May 23, 2014, James Greer was pulled over by BART police and given a field sobriety test.

According to the police report, which we will learn is untrue, police claimed that Greer “got out of his vehicle but would not participate in a field sobriety test.” However, the body camera footage shows that Greer was entirely compliant, and he merely sought to inform the officers of his hernia and injuries.

As the stop progresses, cops begin to swarm the non-violent and obedient man. Decidedly scared of the massive police presence, Greer puts up his hands and merely attempts to back away.
“Don’t be walkin’ away,” barks an officer.

“Wait, wait, wait, wait, what are you guys doing to me?” Greer asks as he is swarmed by police officers who immediately begin attacking him and bringing him down.

Greer, who was 380 pounds the night he was killed, had a hard time putting his arms completely around his back. Officers, utterly ignoring this physical impossibility, continued to force Greer’s arms back.

“Hey, hey, hey, hey! You’re breaking my arm,” Greer says in agony as cops jump all over him, slamming him to the ground.

“When he was on the ground I hear him screaming in agonizing pain,” Greer’s former wife, Deana Greer said.

“Mr. Greer, you need to stop resisting, or you’re going to be tazed,” says an officer as five other officers pounce on the non-violent man who is only trying to prevent his face from being slammed into the ground and the excruciating pain of his stomach hernia.

Greer is tasered three times as multiple cops sit on him, squeezing the air out of this distressed large man.

Police then place Greer in a restraint device called “the wrap,” which is designed to immobilize a suspect.

After suffocating this father for 6.5 minutes, cops then turned Greer over to find that he was unconscious and turning blue. Instead of helping him or rendering aid, police are seen and heard on the body cam footage laughing and making jokes.

According to their report, police said, “emergency medical personnel immediately intervened.” However, Greer family attorney Fulvio Cajina, after reviewing the body cam footage, says that is not at all what happened.

“You see that his lips look blue and discolored. This is someone in urgent medical distress,” Cajina said. “Nearly 7 minutes went by before anyone tried CPR on Mr. Greer. There’s no sense of urgency. In fact, what they’re doing is they’re joking around.”

One hour after Greer had been pulled over, he was pronounced dead at the Saint Rose Hospital.

Tom Nolan, a criminologist at Merrimack College who worked as a Boston police officer for 27 years, was sharply critical of the actions of officers after viewing the video, reports the East Bay Times.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a hyper-exaggerated, borderline-hysterical response,” Nolan said. “We don’t need 20-plus police officers, including superior officers, on the scene to take a guy into custody for a drunk driving offense.”

“I’d say that the heavy hand of the Taser is what contributed to this guy’s demise,” Nolan added.

His father died from the “excessive and unbearable weight of the officers” and from “multiple Tasings,” son, Joseph Greer says.

According to the state-sanctioned medical examiner’s report, however, Greer died from “exerting himself while under the influence of PCP.”

To add insult to death, the Hayward police never investigated Greer’s death because, according to ABC7 News, the county’s policy has been to only investigate deaths in which police fired their weapons.

In spite of the video evidence which shows the officers lied in their reports because a gun was not fired, this man’s death was a non-issue to the department.

“He was kind of the glue that always kept everyone together,” Deana Greer said. “We believe police are there to protect us and to see somebody who we trust to do such a thing. I don’t think I will ever accept that.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-kill-unarmed-man-body-cam-investigation-cops-fire-shot/

http://abc7news.com/news/i-team-investigation-hayward-family-blames-police-for-mans-death/1340093/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2924 on: May 18, 2016, 12:27:39 PM »
Chicago Cop Charged with Felony After Beating Handcuffed Patient

A Chicago man was held down, beaten with brass knuckles and left naked in a jail cell before being taken to a hospital for injuries where he was then beaten again by the same cop while still handcuffed.

Chicago police officer Clauzell Gause was charged with official misconduct on May 17 after newly-released surveillance video from 2014 captured him pushing a handcuffed man into a hospital room, throwing him face-first into a wall and then punching him in the face before shoving him onto a hospital bed.

According to a lawsuit filed by the victim’s attorney, Jerome James was in a restaurant drive-thru throwing a beer bottle in the trash when he was arrested and taken to Calumet District lockup on June 3, 2014.

There, he exchanged words with one of the officers, which prompted a vicious assault by Gause, who beat him with brass knuckles while another officer held him down.

According to the Chicago Tribune, video footage from the jail shows Gause carrying something metal in his hand after attacking James, but the city’s law department denies video from inside the cell shows the beating.

After beating James, Gause and a second officer who has not yet been charged, stripped him naked and left him for hours in a jail cell, bloodied and with a broken tooth, according to the lawsuit.

Only after another inmate complained to a supervising sergeant that he needed medical attention was James transported to Roseland Community Hospital.

That’s where the 6-foot-6 Gause who weighs 235 pounds claims he was suddenly assaulted by James during a blood pressure check, which prompted him to handcuff the man, and then reciprocate the alleged assault, along with another officer.

However, video of that assault has yet to surface.

According to prosecutors, photographs and medical records show James suffered swelling and lacerations to his forehead.

Julie Herrera, an attorney for James, told the Tribune that officers at Roseland Community Hospital claimed James was a “violent mental” and sedated him against his will before they transported him to Jackson Park Hospital for a mental evaluation, where it was determined he had no mental issues.

He was released without being criminally charged later that day.

Records show the city of Chicago settled the lawsuit with James in December of 2015 for $60,000.

Gause was demoted to desk duty, but remains on the department’s payroll. Anthony Guglielmi, Chicago Police Department’s chief spokesperson, said it was unclear if further disciplinary action would be taken in light of the recent felony charge.

According to city records, Clauzell Gause managed to stockpile 11 complaints from 2006-2014 including a 2013 excessive force complaint and the one made by James, who filed his complaint with the Independent Police Review Authority three days after the assault at the hospital.

An attorney for Gause, William Fahy, however, told Judge Adam Bourgeois Jr. in court on Tuesday that the officer had no disciplinary record.

After telling Gause he had to face the consequences of his actions, Judge Bourgeois said, “I don’t think locking you up is going to serve any purpose. … I don’t think you are a danger to anybody.”

Fahy told the judge his client ‘served the police department honorably’.

Judge Bourgeois declined to watch video of the incident after the state attorney insisted twice and released Gause on his own recognizance, which means the officer did not have to pay bail.

If convicted, Gause faces anywhere from probation to five years in prison.