Cop Tyranny Thread

Don't link to huffpo. You're better than that.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/07/19/nyc-chokehold-death-police/12881805/
same article, different sauce

Kill a guy suspected of selling loosies? Really. Where the hell did this guy learn the prohibited choke hold? How's this, stop hiring people that are MMA fighters, wife beaters, ninjas, bar brawlers, dog kickers and the like.
So in the corporate world if someone has the audacity to compliment a woman's skirt, it's mandatory sexual harassment training for everyone. But if a cop kills a man, they send out a memo to stop sing prohibited choke holds that they surely were not taught at the academy. I see.
 
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/07/19/nyc-chokehold-death-police/12881805/
same article, different sauce

Kill a guy suspected of selling loosies? Really. Where the hell did this guy learn the prohibited choke hold? How's this, stop hiring people that are MMA fighters, wife beaters, ninjas, bar brawlers, dog kickers and the like.
So in the corporate world if someone has the audacity to compliment a woman's skirt, it's mandatory sexual harassment training for everyone. But if a cop kills a man, they send out a memo to stop sing prohibited choke holds that they surely were not taught at the academy. I see.

The "don't comment on Susan's ass" videos have stopped sexual harassment in its tracks, by all means, create a "don't choke the fat black guy" video to wipe out all this tyranny.
 
Ha, you can't threaten cops with jail. Threaten them with boring training videos. I think that works.
"Bob, don't choke that guy to death or we'll all have to sit through another anti-choking class while you're on paid suspension!"
 
http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-newark-federal-monitor-20140722-story.html#page=1

Federal monitor ordered for Newark police for civil rights violations

By Tina Susman, James Queally contact the reporters

New Jersey's largest police department will be placed under federal oversight for repeatedly violating residents' civil rights, using excessive force and failing to discipline officers for a wide range of misconduct, the Justice Department announced Tuesday.

The Newark Police Department, a 1,000-member force that patrols one of the most violent cities in the Northeast, will be subject to court-ordered reform, a move that comes after a three-year investigation into rampant misconduct in the agency, according to the Justice Department and court documents.

The federal investigation was launched in 2011, less than a year after a scathing report from the American Civil Liberties Union said the police department was incapable of policing itself.

16x9


The investigation found that city police officers had no constitutional basis for 75% of the pedestrian stops they conducted in recent years. It also determined that officers often used excessive force during arrests but underreported the level of force used.

"The people of Newark deserve to be safe, and so do the thousands who come here to work, to learn, and to take advantage of all the city has to offer,” Paul Fishman, the U.S. attorney in New Jersey, said in a statement. “They also need to know the police protecting them are doing that important -- and often dangerous -- work while respecting their constitutional rights."

The noon announcement was made at Fishman's office in Newark. The court monitor has not yet been chosen, but city and federal officials aim to have the order finalized by mid-September.

“Our investigation uncovered troubling patterns in stops, arrests and use of force by the police in Newark. With this agreement, we’re taking decisive action to address potential discrimination and end unconstitutional conduct by those who are sworn to serve their fellow citizens,” Atty. Gen. Eric. H. Holder Jr. said in a statement.

Fishman said Justice Department officials and the city had signed "an agreement in principal" to implement a consent decree that will include some form of civilian oversight. An independent monitor will evaluate and report on the city's implementation of the civilian oversight entity, the details of which have yet to be determined.

The goal is to have the agreement finalized by Sept 15., and the decree will be binding.

Mayor Ras Baraka, who only took office July 1 and has been a longtime critic of the agency, attended the news conference with Fishman and said he welcomed the decree.

“One could look at this 22 days in as mayor as the roof is caving in," Baraka said. "I look at it as the opportunity to build a new roof."

Fishman said Newark police officials and Baraka cooperated with the investigation. He also said it was not possible to say when the police abuses began. But he said the offenses clearly had gone on over time, and that it would take time to fix them.

"It will take real work," he said. "Bad habits ... are hard to break. "

There is no time frame set for the decree's lifespan. In other major police agencies, including the Los Angeles Police Department and New Jersey State Police, consent decrees were in effect for about a decade or more.

"I think it will take years," said Jocelyn Samuels of the attorney general's civil rights division. Samuels said the decree would include benchmarks so officials can evaluate progress. Samuels said 14 police departments were currently under federal oversight.

The federal investigation detailed longstanding and institutional misconduct, including retaliatory arrests "for behavior perceived as insubordinate or disrespectful to officers," according to the documents. Officers also routinely stole from suspects, and Newark’s stop and arrest tactics both unfairly targeted blacks, according to the report.

According to census data, blacks make up 54% of the city’s population. But 79% of those arrested by Newark police and 85% of those stopped identify as black, the report found.

In a 52-page report detailing the federal government’s findings, investigators said that Newark police would often stop residents simply for “loitering” in high-crime areas, and offer little to no justification for interactions with residents.

They are saying that potentially up to 75 percent of stops are unconstitutional. That's huge. That is just widespread 4th Amendment abuses. - Udi Ofer, excecutive director of the New Jersey chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union
“In particular, thousands of the stops — all of which were at least long enough to run warrant checks — involved individuals who were described merely as ‘milling,’ ‘loitering,’ or ‘wandering,’ without any indication of criminal activity or suspicion,” the report said. “Some of those were augmented with a notation that the ‘milling,’ ‘loitering,’ or ‘wandering’ was taking place in high-crime areas, high-narcotics areas, or high-gang activity areas. Officers also routinely stopped and ran warrant checks for individuals solely for being present in high-crime areas, near scenes of suspected or reported crimes, or simply ‘in areas.’”

The report detailed several instances of retaliatory arrests of residents who simply criticized police actions. In one instance, a woman was charged with aggravated assault for spitting in an officer’s direction and complaining about the arrest of a neighbor, the report said. In another, a man was charged with obstruction of justice when he questioned an officer’s decision to arrest someone.

The investigation found that 20% of the city's officers reported uses of force that were either unconstitutional or unnecessary, while internal affairs inquiries into use-of-force incidents were often lacking.

The department received 989 excessive-force complaints against officers from 2000 to 2009, according to records reviewed by the Los Angeles Times.

Only 21 of those cases, or 2%, resulted in disciplinary action or criminal charges against the officers. Nationwide, policing experts say, an average of 9% of all excessive-force complaints against officers are sustained.

Udi Ofer, executive director of the New Jersey chapter of the ACLU, told The Times that the report's findings could mark a historic moment for Newark.

“They are saying that potentially up to 75% of stops are unconstitutional. That’s huge. That is just widespread 4th Amendment abuses," Ofer said. “These are serious findings that are going to need dramatic reforms. Now Newark will be put to the test in how it will respond to these findings.”

The federal report calls for improved internal affairs practices and use-of-force reporting, the creation of a Civilian Complaint Review Board and "improved data collection" regarding the department's pedestrian stop practices.

Newark, a city of roughly 250,000 which sits just 15 miles outside of New York City, has been a haven for drug and gang violence for years, patrolled by a department whose ranks were slashed by municipal budget cuts in 2010.

The city saw 111 homicides in 2013, its bloodiest year since 1990. Newark has long struggled with poverty and high unemployment, and the city's residents and police have had a lukewarm relationship since 1967, when a series of race riots left dozens dead.


“We certainly hope that Newark will use this opportunity to create a police force that is respectful of civil rights and that is accountable to the people of Newark," Ofer said. "Newark is facing an opportunity that only comes once every few generations to establish meaningful reforms of the police department.”

The federal government has taken over a number of city police departments since it began launching "pattern or practice" investigations into civil rights violations in the 1990s. The Los Angeles Police Department was placed under a monitor from 2001 to 2013 in the wake of the Rodney King beating and the Rampart Division scandal, and the New Orleans and Albuquerque police departments are currently under federal watch.

Newark is the second police department in New Jersey's history to receive a federal watchdog. The New Jersey State Police were the subject of a federal investigation after a racial-profiling scandal in 1999, and they remained under a court-appointed monitor for roughly a decade.
 
Why people choose to listen to security guards is beyond me.

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Security guards remind me of the goofballs on courtroom reality shows that try to mimic lawyer talk from TV. They clearly don't know what they're talking about and it's made worse by trying to sound official.
 
Another militant cop using large words treating photography as a crime.


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At least they had the claim of him being a suspect for a real crime.
True story:
Younger me worked a late shift at a bowling alley within walking distance of home. One night, I'm walking through a strip mall and a cruiser pulls up asking me where I'm going. I say home, and we both go on our way. Well, actually a few seconds later as I'm cutting behind a dumpster to the hole in the fence shortcut, I get lights shone on me and am spread out and frisked while seven cruisers miraculously appear.
They had the decency to explain that there was recently a robbery and my only gripe was how hot the hood of the car was.
:truestory:
 
Am I insane to be thinking that
1. You're kind of a retard if you can't restrain someone from behind without going for the windpipe.
2. Ignoring the "prohibited" nature of choke holds, they seem to dole these out for the most mundane and harmless infractions.
3. What happened to the mercenary nature of the constabulary? Write a ticket so they have to go to court or pay a fine. That's how you dopes get paid! Dole out a ticket and walk away. Let some other cop come if they continue after the initial citation.
4. Ghetto idiots, pretend to comply until the cops leave, than carry on. So simple!
 
Am I insane to be thinking that
1. You're kind of a retard if you can't restrain someone from behind without going for the windpipe.
2. Ignoring the "prohibited" nature of choke holds, they seem to dole these out for the most mundane and harmless infractions.
3. What happened to the mercenary nature of the constabulary? Write a ticket so they have to go to court or pay a fine. That's how you dopes get paid! Dole out a ticket and walk away. Let some other cop come if they continue after the initial citation.
4. Ghetto idiots, pretend to comply until the cops leave, than carry on. So simple!

It's hard to comply. You see so much abuse in the ghetto that your first reaction is fuck the police.
 
I guess I'm confusing fratboys with ghetto idiots. Fratboys, oh those privileged whities, know how to act chastised until the complainant is out of sight.
 
^Alluded to by Rob Hustle:
"This guy rolled through a stop sign"
That's drugs for sale. Get some doctors to rape him, send him a bill in the mail​

My favorite article on said topic:
When David Eckert left the Wal-Mart parking lot in Deming, NM, he apparently failed to come to a complete stop at a stop sign. What happened next is the stuff of prison-planet nightmares.
...It began when the police believed he was “clenching his buttocks” as he exited the vehicle. He was taken to a local hospital to have his rectal cavity probed. When the doctors there refused to perform the procedure, the cops took him to a hospital where they weren’t so hung up on the whole human-dignity thing. And then:
1. Eckert’s abdominal area was X-rayed; no narcotics were found.
2. Doctors then performed an exam of Eckert’s anus with their fingers; no narcotics were found.
3. Doctors performed a second exam of Eckert’s anus with their fingers; no narcotics were found.
4. Doctors penetrated Eckert’s anus to insert an enema. Eckert was forced to defecate in front of doctors and police officers. Eckert watched as doctors searched his stool. No narcotics were found.
5. Doctors penetrated Eckert’s anus to insert an enema a second time. Eckert was forced to defecate in front of doctors and police officers. Eckert watched as doctors searched his stool. No narcotics were found.
6. Doctors penetrated Eckert’s anus to insert an enema a third time. Eckert was forced to defecate in front of doctors and police officers. Eckert watched as doctors searched his stool. No narcotics were found.
7. Doctors then X-rayed Eckert again; no narcotics were found.
8. Doctors prepared Eckert for surgery, sedated him, and then performed a colonoscopy where a scope with a camera was inserted into Eckert’s anus, rectum, colon and large intestines. No narcotics were found.
The most frightening part of the entire story is the suspicion one gets that the colonscopy was, effectively, a punishment for complaining and causing trouble during the other parts of the assault. ..Should Mr. Eckert be successful in his lawsuit, look for everybody involved to be “punished” with copious amounts of paid vacation time... Mr. Eckert is being billed for the services after the fact.
http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/20...of-rectal-violation-and-a-forced-colonoscopy/
 
Jimmy doesn't watch vertical videos but I do. Cops must be hella cheap if a domestic disturbance in an apartment gets a dozen sent out.
"Why don't the female cop arrest her?"
 
I think this is a result to the constant calls for "more cops on the beat." Instead of a pair of well-trained professional officers, you get a score of incompetent buffoons. Quality over quantity!
 
Bla bla bla to 3 minutes and then out of nowhere the militant lesbian cuffs them for recording.

Sad on many levels because the woman, as stupid and worthless as her comments were, was just having a conversation about her community, then the dyke mafia shows up asking if they had permission to record, which they don't need.

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http://ktla.com/2014/08/12/man-hospitalized-after-being-shot-by-police-in-south-l-a/

Police Fatally Shoot Man in South L.A.; Family Members Say He Was Lying Down When Shot
Posted 5:01 AM, August 12, 2014, by John A. Moreno, Melissa Pamer and Nerissa Knight, Updated at 11:39pm, August 12, 2014
Family members said Tuesday that a 25-year-old man was complying with police orders when he was fatally shot by LAPD officers in the Florence neighborhood South Los Angeles.


Officers are seen on a street in South Los Angeles where a man was fatally shot by police on Monday, Aug. 11, 2014. (Credit: KTLA)

Officers responded to a report of a possible officer-involved shooting at the intersection of West 65th Street and South Broadway (map) at 8:12 p.m. Monday, Lt. Ellis Imaizumi of the Los Angeles Police Department said Monday evening.

Patrol officers had “conducted an investigative stop” in the 200 block of 65th Street, and “during the stop a struggle ensued” and police opened fire, an LAPD news release issued midmorning Tuesday stated.

The man was transported to a hospital where he underwent surgery, according to Officer Sara Faden, spokeswoman for the LAPD. He later succumbed to his injuries, police confirmed.


LAPD responds to the scene were police fatally shot a man on Aug. 11, 2014. (Credit: KTLA)

Officers sustained minor scrapes during the altercation and did not require hospitalization, Imaizumi had said very early Tuesday. The news release stated no officers were injured.

Police were being tight-lipped with details about the incident because of a “gathering” at the scene of the shooting, Imaizumi said.

It was unknown if the “suspect” had any gang affiliations, police said in the news release.

A woman who said she was the deceased man’s mother identified him in a phone call to KTLA as Ezell Ford.

“My heart is so heavy,” Tritobia Ford said in an interview Tuesday evening. “My son was a good kid. He didn’t deserve to die the way he did.”

Her son was lying on the ground and complying with the officers’ commands when he was shot three times, Tritobia Ford said.

In the aftermath of the shooting, she said, police refused to inform her of where Ezell Ford was hospitalized.

An LAPD supervisor at the scene of the shooting was unaware of anyone being denied information, Faden said Tuesday.

The victim’s family members interviewed on camera at the scene of the shooting on Monday night supported Tritobia Ford’s account.

A man who did not give his name and identified himself only as a cousin of the victim described what he witnessed, saying he had been around the corner when the altercation first occurred.

“They laid him out and for whatever reason, they shot him in the back, knowing mentally, he has complications. Every officer in this area, from the Newton Division, knows that — that this child has mental problems,” the man said.

“The excessive force … there was no purpose for it. The multiple shootings in the back while he’s laying down? No. Then when the mom comes, they don’t try to console her … they pull the billy clubs out.”

The victim’s grandmother, who did not give her name, told KTLA in a phone conversation that he was 24. Other relatives insisted he was 25 years old.

An investigation was ongoing into the shooting, which came two days after Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old, was killed by police in Ferguson, Missouri. The shooting in the St. Louis suburb sparked widespread anger, marches, confrontations with police and looting.

Reaction to the South Los Angeles shooting was spreading on social media Tuesday under the hashtag #EzellFord. A rally was being organized for 3 p.m. Sunday at LAPD headquarters, according to a Facebook invitation.

Civil rights leaders called for a meeting with LAPD Chief Charlie Beck over Ford’s shooting, according to Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable President Earl Ofari Hutchinson.

“The killing of Ezell Ford — coming on the heels of the Michael Brown killing in Ferguson, Missouri — again raises the issue and problem of tense police-community relations,” Hutchinson said in a statement. “This is the sole reason we have called for a meeting … to get all the facts in the shooting and for assurances that the shooting will be subject to the most rigorous review to determine if there was any wrongdoing in Ford’s death.”

The fatal incident was expected to be reviewed by Beck, the Office of the Inspector General and Board of Police Commissioners “for compliance with the department’s use-of-force policy, which states that an officer’s use-of-force actions must objectively reasonable,” the LAPD’s news release stated.

The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Justice System Integrity Division was also expected to review the shooting.

Anyone with information was asked to call the LAPD’s Force Investigation Division at 213-486-5230.
 
Investigative stop? If the victim knew his rights, he'd just walk away. I mean the goon squad would probably still shoot him in the back... Still puzzled over how cops lose control of situations where, you know, they have legal authority on top of their armament, paramilitary training and massive backup resources.

This very sad. The piece of shit cops choked him to death.[/MEDIA]
I heard some official on the radio claiming that it is completely impossible to restrain a big fat guy by their hands, arms, legs, etc. and that you have to choke them. I don't buy it.
 
The pictures coming out of Ferguson are nuts. Looks like a full on military invasion. They even arrested reporters from the WaPo and HuffPost.
 
The media is, of course, not up on the law.
Washington Post Executive Editor Martin D. Baron said "there was absolutely no justification" for Lowery's arrest and called the police conduct appalling.

"He was illegally instructed to stop taking video of officers," Baron said in a statement. "Then he followed officers' instructions to leave a McDonald's — and after contradictory instructions on how to exit, he was slammed against a soda machine and then handcuffed. That behavior was wholly unwarranted and an assault on the freedom of the press to cover the news. The physical risk to Wesley himself is obvious and outrageous.

"After being placed in a holding cell, he was released with no charges and no explanation. He was denied information about the names and badge numbers of those who arrested him. ... We are appalled by the conduct of police officers involved."
http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-ferguson-reporter-arrests-20140813-story.html

There is video of a police sniper pointing a rifle's laser sight at an unarmed man for having the audacity to take a few steps into an empty street.
 
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That's a bit of a distinction without a difference in this case, isn't it?

Not at all. In an arrest you get criminally charged and (usually) sit in jail overnight (at least). Probable cause is required. With a detention, as Mr. Street alluded to, you have your movement restricted for up to 20 minutes (case law). Only reasonable suspicion is required.

FWIW, resisting detention can justify a "resisting arrest" charge.
 
Warren Wilhelm said:
The place to argue your case is in court, not in the middle of the street.
Unless they kill you.

This line of do what we say and you'll be all right is what kidnappers, rapists, and robbers say too. It usually means that you will die.
 

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