Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 989444 times)

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4500 on: June 25, 2019, 10:18:13 AM »
This is good news. I have utter contempt for that POS. I get that a citizen might not want to enter a building where shots are being fired. Hell, I get that a cop wouldn't really want to.. but when you signed up for that, and put on that badge and uniform, you should have known that if you found yourself in that position, that's what you had to do, and whatever the punishment is for failing to respond in combat, should at least be the penalty for this case. This wasn't a gray area, this wasn't a case where there was confusion and he might not have known what to do. This is what you train for, and understand if it happens, you act. I would love to sit on that jury.
I've talked to several of my police friends and they are all disgusted by his lack of action.    


Great to hear that from your good self.
Hopefully you feel the same about many other dreadful things on here.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4501 on: June 25, 2019, 11:27:52 AM »

Great to hear that from your good self.
Hopefully you feel the same about many other dreadful things on here.

Likely I do.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4502 on: June 25, 2019, 11:39:43 AM »
Dirty Cops beat Suicide patient in hospital and film it laughing.




Disgusting! Glad to hear the asshole will be doing time for that.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4503 on: June 25, 2019, 06:49:27 PM »
Another "brave hero" who shot a monstrous 250 lb Cerberus small chihuahua in the head, "fearing for his safety"... Notice how after shooting the dog, the resident orders him to leave the property and not only does he disobey and refuses to comply but he advances towards him. Maybe the resident should have feared for his life and shot at the armed attacker in self defense. After 5 months, and the sheriff sayign otherwise, he has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty.

Former Faulkner County deputy charged with animal cruelty in dog shooting

A former Faulkner County sheriff's office deputy has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty after shooting a loose Chihuahua in January.

Faulkner County court records show an arrest warrant was issued Tuesday for Keenan Wallace. The warrant had been served by Wednesday morning, according to court records.

Sheriff's office spokesman Erinn Stone confirmed that Wallace was the defendant in the case.

Wallace shot a Chihuahua named Reese's in the head on Jan. 4 after being called about a loose and aggressive dog in a Conway neighborhood, according to the sheriff's office. Wallace, a former K-9 handler, reportedly said he opened fire after the dog lunged at him and tried to bite him. The dog survived.

The dog's caretaker, Doug Canady, said the dog posed no threat to Wallace and was turning away from the deputy when he opened fire. He posted a video of the incident that went viral.

The sheriff's office fired Wallace after investigating the shooting. Sheriff Tim Ryals said in a statement that it did not appear that Wallace violated any state law or agency policy, but had fallen short of department standards.


(0:23)

https://katv.com/news/local/former-faulkner-county-deputy-charged-with-animal-cruelty-in-dog-shooting

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4504 on: June 26, 2019, 08:58:26 PM »
Another "brave hero" who shot a monstrous 250 lb Cerberus small chihuahua in the head, "fearing for his safety"... Notice how after shooting the dog, the resident orders him to leave the property and not only does he disobey and refuses to comply but he advances towards him. Maybe the resident should have feared for his life and shot at the armed attacker in self defense. After 5 months, and the sheriff sayign otherwise, he has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty.

Former Faulkner County deputy charged with animal cruelty in dog shooting

A former Faulkner County sheriff's office deputy has been charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty after shooting a loose Chihuahua in January.

Faulkner County court records show an arrest warrant was issued Tuesday for Keenan Wallace. The warrant had been served by Wednesday morning, according to court records.

Sheriff's office spokesman Erinn Stone confirmed that Wallace was the defendant in the case.

Wallace shot a Chihuahua named Reese's in the head on Jan. 4 after being called about a loose and aggressive dog in a Conway neighborhood, according to the sheriff's office. Wallace, a former K-9 handler, reportedly said he opened fire after the dog lunged at him and tried to bite him. The dog survived.

The dog's caretaker, Doug Canady, said the dog posed no threat to Wallace and was turning away from the deputy when he opened fire. He posted a video of the incident that went viral.

The sheriff's office fired Wallace after investigating the shooting. Sheriff Tim Ryals said in a statement that it did not appear that Wallace violated any state law or agency policy, but had fallen short of department standards.


(0:23)

https://katv.com/news/local/former-faulkner-county-deputy-charged-with-animal-cruelty-in-dog-shooting

A Chihuahua, really?  What a fucking pussy.  Should do time, lose his job and never be allowed to carry a firearm ever again.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4505 on: June 27, 2019, 10:50:24 AM »
Notice how once again the cops try to downplay their abuse through creative use of language and of course trying to discredit the person they abused.

Phoenix Police Suspended Officer Involved in Unwarranted Body Cavity Search

The Phoenix Police Department suspended an officer who performed an unwarranted body cavity search on a 37-year-old black mother in violation of department policy, according to a press statement.

The police narrative did not name the female officer who conducted the search, reveal the length of the suspension (which began in February), or say whether the officer was paid during her disciplinary period. It did not use the phrase "body cavity search," opting instead for "thorough search."

The statement also failed to answer accusations that officers orchestrated a cover-up of the alleged sexual assault of Erica Reynolds, the details of which are outlined in a notice of claim filed Monday.

The situation began on December 26, when Phoenix police surveilled Reynolds meeting with Charles Riggins, the suspected leader of a criminal drug ring. After the meeting, officers pulled Reynolds over and claimed to smell marijuana in her car.

They searched her vehicle, patted her down, and brought out a drug-sniffing dog. None of those procedures turned up any drugs. Still, the officers took her to a substation where they asked her to strip naked and bend over, her claim states. A female cop used her fingers to probe Reynolds' anus and vagina.

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/phoenix-officer-suspended-over-cavity-search-11318316

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4506 on: June 27, 2019, 04:16:36 PM »
Another bad decision that could have wider implications. Apparently, warrants do not matter anymore. What other rights will be waived through the ridiculous "implied consent" and "exigent circumstances" doctrine?

Supreme Court Affirms Police Can Order Blood Drawn From Unconscious DUI Suspects

The Supreme Court has ruled that police may, without a warrant, order blood drawn from an unconscious person suspected of driving under the influence of alcohol.

The Fourth Amendment generally requires police to obtain a warrant for a blood draw. But in a 5-4 vote on Thursday, the court upheld a Wisconsin law that says people driving on a public road have impliedly consented to having their blood drawn if police suspect them of driving under the influence. It also said that "exigent circumstances" permit police to obtain a blood sample without a warrant.

The decision conflicts with previous court rulings in which the justices ruled that a blood draw is a significant bodily intrusion into a person's privacy and that there are less intrusive ways of enforcing drunken driving laws against unconscious motorists — getting a warrant, for instance, which in these tech-savvy days can be done relatively easily and quickly.

In 2013, for instance, the high court ruled that police violated the Constitution when they ordered a nonconsensual blood draw without a warrant in a routine DUI case. The vote then was 5-4, but two of the justices in that majority, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy, are no longer on the court.

The constitutional rights case produced four opinions — two concurring and two in dissent. In a break with his conservatives benchmates, one of those dissents came from Justice Neil Gorsuch.

In his concurring opinion, Thomas wrote that because the evidence of alcohol in drivers' blood will dissipate over time, states can invoke the "exigent-circumstances doctrine" on that basis alone to allow police to order a blood test without a warrant. Explaining why he took a stand apart from Alito's plurality opinion, Thomas wrote that it "adopts a rule more likely to confuse than clarify."

Alito's concurring opinion agreed that speed is vital in obtaining blood-alcohol evidence. But he also said that the demands on police officers' time contribute to creating exigent circumstances that allow an exception to warrant requirements — especially if an unconscious motorist has caused a crash. And he noted that police usually take such drivers to the emergency room — removing their chance of administering a breath test at the police station.

Twenty-eight states have laws similar to Wisconsin's. The case, Mitchell v. Wisconsin, was accepted by the court at the start of this year, amid sharp divisions among state appellate courts over whether the blood draws violate motorists' Fourth Amendment rights.

In separate dissents, Justices Gorsuch and Sonia Sotomayor said the majority had erred in deciding the case on the grounds of exigent circumstances, rather than through an analysis of Wisconsin's implied consent law — the statute they say the state was actually seeking to test.

Sotomayor emphasized that in lower courts, Wisconsin officials admitted there had been time to get a warrant — but they said the step wasn't needed because of implied consent.


"Wisconsin has not once, in any of its briefing before this Court or the state courts, argued that exigent circumstances were present here," Sotomayor wrote. "In fact, in the state proceedings, Wisconsin 'conceded' that the exigency exception does not justify the warrantless blood draw in this case."

In his terse one-page dissent, Gorsuch said the case should have never risen to the Supreme Court in the first place.

"We took this case to decide whether Wisconsin drivers impliedly consent to blood alcohol tests thanks to a state statute," Gorsuch wrote. "That law says that anyone driving in Wisconsin agrees — by the very act of driving — to testing under certain circumstances. But the Court today declines to answer the question presented. Instead, it upholds Wisconsin's law on an entirely different ground—citing the exigent circumstances doctrine."

https://www.npr.org/2019/06/27/732852170/supreme-court-affirms-police-can-draw-blood-from-unconscious-drivers

Princess L

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4507 on: June 27, 2019, 05:18:48 PM »
Another bad decision that could have wider implications. Apparently, warrants do not matter anymore. What other rights will be waived through the ridiculous "implied consent" and "exigent circumstances" doctrine?

Supreme Court Affirms Police Can Order Blood Drawn From Unconscious DUI Suspects

The Supreme Court has ruled that police may, without a warrant, order blood drawn from an unconscious person suspected of driving under the influence of alcohol.

The Fourth Amendment generally requires police to obtain a warrant for a blood draw. But in a 5-4 vote on Thursday, the court upheld a Wisconsin law that says people driving on a public road have impliedly consented to having their blood drawn if police suspect them of driving under the influence. It also said that "exigent circumstances" permit police to obtain a blood sample without a warrant.

The decision conflicts with previous court rulings in which the justices ruled that a blood draw is a significant bodily intrusion into a person's privacy and that there are less intrusive ways of enforcing drunken driving laws against unconscious motorists — getting a warrant, for instance, which in these tech-savvy days can be done relatively easily and quickly.

In 2013, for instance, the high court ruled that police violated the Constitution when they ordered a nonconsensual blood draw without a warrant in a routine DUI case. The vote then was 5-4, but two of the justices in that majority, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy, are no longer on the court.

The constitutional rights case produced four opinions — two concurring and two in dissent. In a break with his conservatives benchmates, one of those dissents came from Justice Neil Gorsuch.

In his concurring opinion, Thomas wrote that because the evidence of alcohol in drivers' blood will dissipate over time, states can invoke the "exigent-circumstances doctrine" on that basis alone to allow police to order a blood test without a warrant. Explaining why he took a stand apart from Alito's plurality opinion, Thomas wrote that it "adopts a rule more likely to confuse than clarify."

Alito's concurring opinion agreed that speed is vital in obtaining blood-alcohol evidence. But he also said that the demands on police officers' time contribute to creating exigent circumstances that allow an exception to warrant requirements — especially if an unconscious motorist has caused a crash. And he noted that police usually take such drivers to the emergency room — removing their chance of administering a breath test at the police station.

Twenty-eight states have laws similar to Wisconsin's. The case, Mitchell v. Wisconsin, was accepted by the court at the start of this year, amid sharp divisions among state appellate courts over whether the blood draws violate motorists' Fourth Amendment rights.

In separate dissents, Justices Gorsuch and Sonia Sotomayor said the majority had erred in deciding the case on the grounds of exigent circumstances, rather than through an analysis of Wisconsin's implied consent law — the statute they say the state was actually seeking to test.

Sotomayor emphasized that in lower courts, Wisconsin officials admitted there had been time to get a warrant — but they said the step wasn't needed because of implied consent.


"Wisconsin has not once, in any of its briefing before this Court or the state courts, argued that exigent circumstances were present here," Sotomayor wrote. "In fact, in the state proceedings, Wisconsin 'conceded' that the exigency exception does not justify the warrantless blood draw in this case."

In his terse one-page dissent, Gorsuch said the case should have never risen to the Supreme Court in the first place.

"We took this case to decide whether Wisconsin drivers impliedly consent to blood alcohol tests thanks to a state statute," Gorsuch wrote. "That law says that anyone driving in Wisconsin agrees — by the very act of driving — to testing under certain circumstances. But the Court today declines to answer the question presented. Instead, it upholds Wisconsin's law on an entirely different ground—citing the exigent circumstances doctrine."

https://www.npr.org/2019/06/27/732852170/supreme-court-affirms-police-can-draw-blood-from-unconscious-drivers


Doesn't matter.  Wisconsin liberal judges only give a slap on the wrist to repeat offenders.  It's not uncommon to have drunkards out on the streets with 3-5-7 duis
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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4508 on: June 27, 2019, 05:24:33 PM »
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Princess L

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4509 on: June 27, 2019, 05:34:19 PM »
And then there's daily advertisements for this  ::)



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Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4510 on: June 27, 2019, 05:53:09 PM »


Doesn't matter.  Wisconsin liberal judges only give a slap on the wrist to repeat offenders.  It's not uncommon to have drunkards out on the streets with 3-5-7 duis

How repeat DUI offenders are punished is not the point of the decision though. The issue was supposed to be "implied consent", which according to Gorsuch wasn't what the Court focused on but rather the "exigent circumstances". Then there is also the issue of the warrantless search. Sotormayor in her dissent mentions:

Quote
The State of Wisconsin conceded in the state courts that it had time to get a warrant to draw Gerald Mitchell’s blood, and that should be the end of the matter. Because the plurality needlessly casts aside the established protections of the warrant requirement in favor of a brand new presumption of exigent circumstances that Wisconsin does not urge, that the state courts did not consider, and that contravenes this Court’s precedent, I respectfully dissent.

So the cops could have obtained a warrant for the blood draw but they didn't bother and went with the blank check of "implied consent".

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4511 on: June 30, 2019, 05:59:31 PM »
With a single wiretap, police collected 9.2 million text messages

For four months in 2018, authorities in Texas collected more than 9.2 million messages under a single court-authorized wiretap order, newly released figures show.

The wiretap, granted by a federal judge in the Southern District of Texas, was granted as part of a narcotics investigation and became the federal wiretap with the most intercepts in 2018, according to the government’s annual wiretap report.

Little is known about the case, except that 149 individuals involved in the case were targeted by the wiretap.  The wiretap expired last year, allowing the judiciary to disclose the case.

To date, no arrests have been made

Trailing behind it was another narcotics investigation in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania saw police obtain a three-month wiretap that collected 9.1 million text message from 45 individuals. No arrests were made either.

The two cases represent the largest wiretap cases seen in years.

https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/29/wiretap-prosecutors-texas/

https://www.uscourts.gov/statistics-reports/wiretap-report-2018

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4512 on: July 02, 2019, 10:14:27 PM »
The "brave heroes" shot dead a 6 year old kid in "self defense"... #kidlivesmatter? Where is the outrage for this killing? Even though it happened almost a year ago it has been hardly mentioned in the news.

Louisiana Cops Shoot into Car, Killing 6-Year-Old Jeremy Mardis

Body cam footage showing Louisiana cops shooting into a car and killing a 6-year-old boy sitting in the passenger seat of his father’s car was released earlier today, showing no evidence that the cops were in fear for their lives as they have been claiming since last year.

After all, not only does the video not show Christopher Few using his car as a weapon by ramming his car into their cars.

His car is not even pointed in their direction.

What it does show is Few sitting in his car with both hands out the window as his car is angled perpendicular to the two Marksville City Marshals who pull up in their cars, step out and start shooting.

The incident took place November 3, 2015 after marshals Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse Jr. claimed they tried to pull Few over for an outstanding warrant.

But it turned out, there was never a warrant for Few’s arrest. Nor was there a gun in the car.

But his son was in the car, a 6-year-old boy named Jeremy Mardis who had been diagnosed with autism. He was shot five times.


At the time, there was talk that perhaps the deputies had a personal vendetta against Few but that has not been talked about since.

The video, which is what led to murder and attempted murder charges against the two cops, captures their surprise when they realized they had just killed a child.

“I never saw a kid in the car, man,” Stafford tells Greenhouse according to the Associated Press, which has not published that part of the video yet.

“I never saw a kid, bro.”

But ballistics indicate he fired his gun 14 times, striking the child at least three times.

Greenhouse fired four times, but they have not determined if his bullets struck anybody.

The footage is from a body cam worn by a third cop, Marksville Police Sgt. Kenneth Parnell, III, who did not fire his gun, although it certainly looks that way from the video.

The video was released today by a judge during a hearing for the two cops. Local media says it has much more footage but much of it is gruesome, so they are deciding what is appropriate to release.

There is no audio for the first 30 seconds of the video, which indicates Parnell turned it on as the other cops were shooting Few, resulting in the half-minute buffer with no audio also being recorded.

Both face second-degree murder and second-degree attempted murder charges.

As is the case with many cops we write about, both cops had a history of violence and unchecked abuses, especially Stafford, who was once charged with aggravated rape, so if only they would have fired him from the get-go, little Jeremy Mardis would be alive today.





https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/28/watch-louisiana-deputies-shoot-into-car-killing-6-year-old-jeremy-mardis/

Remember this story? These cops claimed they had a warrant to serve to someone and when they attempted to do it, they claimed the man tried to hit them with his car (so they could claim to fear for their lives). As expected they lied: they didn't have a warrant (no big deal for scum like them, who cares about warrants when they have a badge and a gun), the man didn't try to hit them and yet they ended up killing the man's 6 year old son. The poor child was shot 5 times.  One of the killers was released from prison after staying less than 2 years... Somehow it was deemed that killing this 6 year old child by shooting him 5 times was not a "crime of violence"...

Norris Greenhouse, Jr. released from prison after completing portion of his sentence



 Norris Greenhouse, Jr. has completed a portion of his sentence and has been released from the custody of the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections as of June 28, according to Ken Pastorick, the communications director for the department.

Greenhouse, Jr. was sentenced to seven years and six months after pleading guilty in October 2017 to malfeasance in office and negligent homicide. He received two years and six months on the malfeasance conviction and five years for negligent homicide for his role in the November 2015 shooting death of 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis and the shooting of his father, Chris Few, in Marksville.

Greenhouse, Jr. was one of two deputy Ward 2 city marshals charged in connection with the crime, the other being Derrick Stafford, who is serving a 40 year sentence for manslaughter and attempted manslaughter.

According to Pastorick, "because by law these are not crimes of violence, he (Greenhouse, Jr.) was required to serve 35-percent of this sentence (958 days)."

https://www.kalb.com/content/news/Norris-Greenhouse-Jr-released-from-prison-after-completing-portion-of-his-sentence-512068622.html

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4513 on: July 05, 2019, 12:25:28 AM »
Remember this case? Once again a thug gets away with shooting, this time he shot at a harmless innocent man who was on the ground and had his hands up. What more could this man have done so that he wouldn't be shot by this violent thug?

North Miami police officer not guilty on lesser charge; jury hung on others

A North Miami police officer on trial in the 2016 shooting of an unarmed man has been found not guilty on one count of culpable negligence, but the jury remains hung on the more serious charges of attempted manslaughter.

Officer Jonathan Aledda was charged with two counts of attempted manslaughter and two counts of culpable negligence in the 2016 shooting of Charles Kinsey.
Jurors returned to deliberate Friday, but they couldn't decide on both counts of attempted manslaughter and one count of culpable negligence.

They asked to re-watch three videos that showed Kinsey on the ground prior to the shooting and also asked to rehear part of Aledda's testimony, in which he talked about what he did after the shooting.

https://www.local10.com/news/florida/north-miami/officer-jonathan-aledda-verdict

Remember this case? What do these violent gang members need to do to go to prison? They abuse, kidnap, shoot, kill innocent people, the elderly, the deaf, even children and they still somehow manage to avoid harsh punishment.
This particular one will not stay a single day in prison, but he has to write an essay. Is this elementary school or what?
He shot at a harmless innocent man, a caretaker, who, probably knowing that an encounter with the criminal gang can turn fatal, laid flat on the ground with his hands up and begged the gang members not to shoot but to no avail.



North Miami Police Officer Avoids Prison in Caretaker Shooting

A North Miami Police officer who was convicted of a misdemeanor but acquitted of attempted manslaughter for shooting at a severely autistic man and wounding the man's caretaker won't be spending time in prison.

At a hearing Wednesday, Officer Jonathan Aledda was sentenced to one year of administrative probation and told he must complete 100 hours of community service related to the developmentally disabled. Aledda also must write an essay about better radio communication at police scenes.

Prosecutor Don Horn said: "His conduct was gross and flagrant, his course of conduct that day showed reckless disregard for human life. It showed reckless disregard for the safety of persons exposed to his dangerous effect. It showed grossly careless disregard for the safety and welfare of the public."

https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/North-Miami-Police-Officer-Avoids-Prison-in-Caretaker-Shooting-512174221.html

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4514 on: July 05, 2019, 04:39:11 AM »
There is little accountability to public sector employees

Remember this case? What do these violent gang members need to do to go to prison? They abuse, kidnap, shoot, kill innocent people, the elderly, the deaf, even children and they still somehow manage to avoid harsh punishment.
This particular one will not stay a single day in prison, but he has to write an essay. Is this elementary school or what?
He shot at a harmless innocent man, a caretaker, who, probably knowing that an encounter with the criminal gang can turn fatal, laid flat on the ground with his hands up and begged the gang members not to shoot but to no avail.



North Miami Police Officer Avoids Prison in Caretaker Shooting

A North Miami Police officer who was convicted of a misdemeanor but acquitted of attempted manslaughter for shooting at a severely autistic man and wounding the man's caretaker won't be spending time in prison.

At a hearing Wednesday, Officer Jonathan Aledda was sentenced to one year of administrative probation and told he must complete 100 hours of community service related to the developmentally disabled. Aledda also must write an essay about better radio communication at police scenes.

Prosecutor Don Horn said: "His conduct was gross and flagrant, his course of conduct that day showed reckless disregard for human life. It showed reckless disregard for the safety of persons exposed to his dangerous effect. It showed grossly careless disregard for the safety and welfare of the public."

https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/North-Miami-Police-Officer-Avoids-Prison-in-Caretaker-Shooting-512174221.html

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4515 on: July 05, 2019, 05:21:18 PM »
Skeletor your last 2 posts are tough to understand just How these Scumbags keep
Getting away with little to no punishment.
They are utter scumbags- A uniform & a badge doesn’t change that.
It really does appear they can literally get away with Murder 99.9% of the Time.


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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4518 on: July 05, 2019, 08:17:50 PM »
Dallas police officer accused of writing fake tickets arrested

A Dallas police officer accused of writing fake tickets and forging names was arrested Thursday. Officer Matt Rushing was arrested on 10 counts of tampering with a government record.

His arrest, WFAA sources say, was part of a Dallas Police Department criminal investigation and audit of tickets issued by the officer.  Sources say Rushing is one of the leading ticket writers for the department.

https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/crime/dallas-police-officer-accused-of-writing-fake-tickets-arrested/287-963af3e1-f392-4f9d-80ee-68be0e81ac99

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4519 on: July 05, 2019, 08:38:30 PM »
MSP troopers blow through stop sign, arrest driver that ran into them

Not even 30 seconds after a crash involving undercover Michigan State Police troopers and a civilian, the troopers ordered that civilian to the ground, threatening him with a taser and handcuffing him, according to his family.
Carlos Martinez's red Honda crashed into the Jeep, causing the Jeep to spin 360 degrees before stopping next to a house where a surveillance camera captured all of it.

The undercover trooper, who was driving, got out of his crashed SUV, walked over to Martinez, who was slowly getting out of his car, and the trooper ordered Martinez to the ground. The trooper's partner then handcuffed him.

https://www.wxyz.com/news/msp-troopers-blow-through-stop-sign-arrest-driver-that-ran-into-them

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4520 on: July 07, 2019, 09:00:12 PM »
Indiana Is Still Arguing That It's Constitutional To Seize Your Car for Driving 5 MPH Over the Speed Limit

After losing at the U.S Supreme Court, the state of Indiana still hasn't given up its argument that there are virtually no Eighth Amendment limits on what it can seize using civil asset forfeiture.

In oral arguments before the Indiana Supreme Court last week, Indiana Solicitor General Thomas Fisher said the state's position that it would be constitutional to seize any and every car that went over the speed limit—a line of argument that elicited laughter from the nation's highest court last year—hasn't budged.

The Indiana Supreme Court is now reconsidering the case of Tyson Timbs' $42,000 Land Rover, and whether the state's 2015 seizure of Timbs' car after he was convicted of a drug felony violated his Eighth Amendment protections against excessive fines and fees.

In February, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously reversed the Indiana Supreme Court's ruling that Timbs could not challenge the seizure on Eighth Amendment grounds because the excessive fines clause had not yet been applied, or "incorporated," to the states.

https://reason.com/2019/07/03/indiana-is-still-arguing-that-its-constitutional-to-seize-your-car-for-driving-5-mph-over-the-speed-limit/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4521 on: July 08, 2019, 07:55:43 AM »
Watchdog says FBI has access to about 640M photographs

A government watchdog says the FBI has access to about 640 million photographs — including from driver’s licenses, passports and mugshots — that can be searched using facial recognition technology.

The figure reflects how the technology is becoming an increasingly powerful law enforcement tool, but is also stirring fears about the potential for authorities to intrude on the lives of Americans. It was reported by the Government Accountability Office at a congressional hearing in which both Democrats and Republicans raised questions about the use of the technology.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/fbi-has-access-to-about-640m-photographs-watchdog-says

FBI, ICE find state driver’s license photos are a gold mine for facial-recognition searches

Agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Immigration and Customs Enforcement have turned state driver’s license databases into a facial-recognition gold mine, scanning through millions of Americans’ photos without their knowledge or consent, newly released documents show.

Thousands of facial-recognition requests, internal documents and emails over the past five years, obtained through public-records requests by Georgetown Law researchers and provided to The Washington Post, reveal that federal investigators have turned state departments of motor vehicles databases into the bedrock of an unprecedented surveillance infrastructure.

Police have long had access to fingerprints, DNA and other “biometric data” taken from criminal suspects. But the DMV records contain the photos of a vast majority of a state’s residents, most of whom have never been charged with a crime.

Neither Congress nor state legislatures have authorized the development of such a system, and growing numbers of Democratic and Republican lawmakers are criticizing the technology as a dangerous, pervasive and error-prone surveillance tool.

Rep. Jim Jordan (Ohio), the House Oversight Committee’s ranking Republican, seemed particularly incensed during a hearing into the technology last month at the use of driver’s license photos in federal facial-recognition searches without the approval of state legislators or individual license holders.

“They’ve just given access to that to the FBI,” he said. “No individual signed off on that when they renewed their driver’s license, got their driver’s licenses. They didn’t sign any waiver saying, ‘Oh, it’s okay to turn my information, my photo, over to the FBI.’ No elected officials voted for that to happen.”

Despite those doubts, federal investigators have turned facial recognition into a routine investigative tool. Since 2011, the FBI has logged more than 390,000 facial-recognition searches of federal and local databases, including state DMV databases, the Government Accountability Office said last month, and the records show that federal investigators have forged daily working relationships with DMV officials. In Utah, FBI and ICE agents logged more than 1,000 facial-recognition searches between 2015 and 2017, the records show. Names and other details are hidden, though dozens of the searches are marked as having returned a “possible match.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/07/07/fbi-ice-find-state-drivers-license-photos-are-gold-mine-facial-recognition-searches

Primemuscle

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4522 on: July 08, 2019, 12:36:58 PM »

Seriously  :o :o :o
WTFF
Like you said it Fucking Insanity!!

The law seems pretty cut and dry. However, there's sometimes more to the story than the media reports.

A friend has at times owned as many as five vehicles, most of them relics from the 60's and 70's. His garage is full of computer stuff, which he also repairs. So, the cars are in front of his home, which is located in a residential neighborhood, in the city of Milwaukie, Clackamas County, Oregon.

Across the street form my previous home in Rivercrest Park, OR, the owner did auto body repairs inside his garage as a business. He worked on one vehicle at a time. This is how he skirted the zoning code which disallowed running a business out of your home. Also, none of his neighbors reported him.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4523 on: July 08, 2019, 01:19:45 PM »
The law seems pretty cut and dry. However, there's sometimes more to the story than the media reports.

A friend has at times owned as many as five vehicles, most of them relics from the 60's and 70's. His garage is full of computer stuff, which he also repairs. So, the cars are in front of his home, which is located in a residential neighborhood, in the city of Milwaukie, Clackamas County, Oregon.

Across the street form my previous home in Rivercrest Park, OR, the owner did auto body repairs inside his garage as a business. He worked on one vehicle at a time. This is how he skirted the zoning code which disallowed running a business out of your home. Also, none of his neighbors reported him.

Of course we are seeing this more & more in terms of what the media reports or rather doesn’t.

I just find it a bit OTT that they trying to stop people working on their own vehicles
It will just lead to more & more that you won’t be allowed to do at your own home
It’s a very slippery slope downhill.


Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #4524 on: July 08, 2019, 11:58:24 PM »
Not only was the man shot, but the cops stole his money. There is no word yet on charging the cops with larceny, like any "ordinary" person would be if they stole money from someone.

APD fires officer connected to money stolen from a deceased victim



Leilani Collier found Jamel Harris lying in the road, shot in the head on June 19. After trying to save him, she gave his belongings, including more than $500 to Atlanta police when they arrived on scene. That money disappeared and an investigation into what happened was opened.

At the center of the investigation is Officer Keisha Richburg. As a result of their findings, Richburg was let go from the force.

A statement was sent to CBS46 reading in part:

"An administrative investigation was not able to determine what happened to the cash, but Officer Richburg did not properly account for the money according to the department's policies and procedures. As a result, she was terminated."

https://www.cbs46.com/news/apd-fires-officer-connected-to-money-stolen-from-a-deceased/article_cd462a3c-a1f8-11e9-99fc-13bd07fef99f.html