SmarterthanYou
rebel
* A Laurel Montana police officer received a deferred sentence in a plea deal for his causing an armed stand-off with police after an alcohol-induced domestic incident where he threatened suicide and shoved his wife during an argument. He’s now looking forward to getting back to work as a cop.so a drunken thug with a badge causes an armed standoff with other officers, threatens suicide, and commits an act of domestic violence is allowed to plea the charges down so he can keep his badge and be back on the street to possibly threaten, harass, and maybe even kill a citizen.
* Houston Texas police are accused of hitting a motorcyclist they were chasing and pushing him into an intersection where he was hit and killed. Eyewitnesses say that the officers then moved the body in order to cover up what had happened as police later blamed the man they were chasing and claimed that the man ran a stop sign and caused an accident himself.where's the dashcam videos. typical cover your ass cop talk as follows - "A spokesperson for the Houston Police department said: "It is the actions of the suspects who flee from police, which is a felony, that can lead to such accident". total evasion of any responsibility. typical tax feeder mentality, nothing is their fault.
* The Polk County Florida sheriff’s “Progressive Discipline” policy is prompting questions as a local paper examines one still-serving deputy’s extensive history of misconduct that includes disciplinary actions for dishonesty and insubordination that have other law enforcement leaders saying they would have fired one of their officers a long time ago if they did things like that. You might recall mention of “progressive discipline” policies when we reported on an officer out of Fort Wayne Indiana who just rolled up an excessive force incident for his 15th career disciplinary finding… This Polk County deputy has 20 career complaints.as time drags by, how many other agencies will we see apply these new 'progressive' policies in order to keep their thugs?
* A Medina County Ohio deputy has been charged with abduction, dereliction of duty, felonious assault, and unauthorized use of property when he allegedly conspired with jail inmates to have a suspected child molester assaulted. I know, it’s part of popular crime folklore that molesters get the treatment when they are in prison… but this was a person who was supposed to be innocent until proven guilty and, to the best of my knowledge, there is no such thing in the US as being sentenced to a gang beat-down as punishment for any crime.
* An Assumption Parish Louisiana deputy is facing an astounding 538 counts of malfeasance in office, 17 counts of illegally carrying a weapon with narcotics, and a single count of possession with intent to distribute while also being charged with obtaining a dangerous substance through fraud. During a search of the deputy’s home state police discovered 102 evidence envelopes from narcotics investigations and the DA is saying this can jeopardize several hundred cases.
* A Bexar County Texas deputy was arrested in a sting operation for attempting to smuggle heroin into jail after he was identified as the source of drugs being smuggled into the jail.
* Six Burbank California police officers have been fired on allegations of excessive force and other unspecified acts of misconduct related to a 2007 investigation into a robbery at a bakery. Though, there seems to be some contention about some of the firings in counter allegations of retaliation against whistleblowing.
we're watching a report where there are some unanswered questions about a Las Vegas Nevada raid performed on an apartment that a couple had just moved into a month ago that left a father-to-be dead after police claim he allegedly made a “furtive movement” (cop speak used to justify killing a citizen when no weapon is found after the murder) towards one of the heavily armed officers during a drug raid on the residence. But, it’s what hasn’t been said that has me paying close attention to this case.
Normally, when there’s an officer-involved shooting police will be quick to say when the person shot had a weapon, and when they don’t it usually means there wasn’t a weapon involved… also, when something like this happens during a raid police will be quick to justify the use of force by discussing how much drug evidence was seized during the raid, and when they don’t it usually means they didn’t find anything or that it was a botched raid.
The man who was fatally shot has been described as having no criminal record and, while possibly a recreational pot smoker at one time, nobody seems to indicate that he was a dealer of any sort. Furthermore, his pregnant wife, who was hiding in a closet when the raid went down, said they both hid because they believed it was a robbery, indicating the raiders might not have announced before breaking in.
So, for now we have what seems to be a raid where no drugs were found and an unarmed expectant father was shot to death when police startled him when they barged into the bathroom he was hiding in. But, until these lacking details are verified or actual allegations are made, I can’t add it.
www.injusticeeverywhere.com
* Houston Texas police are accused of hitting a motorcyclist they were chasing and pushing him into an intersection where he was hit and killed. Eyewitnesses say that the officers then moved the body in order to cover up what had happened as police later blamed the man they were chasing and claimed that the man ran a stop sign and caused an accident himself.where's the dashcam videos. typical cover your ass cop talk as follows - "A spokesperson for the Houston Police department said: "It is the actions of the suspects who flee from police, which is a felony, that can lead to such accident". total evasion of any responsibility. typical tax feeder mentality, nothing is their fault.
* The Polk County Florida sheriff’s “Progressive Discipline” policy is prompting questions as a local paper examines one still-serving deputy’s extensive history of misconduct that includes disciplinary actions for dishonesty and insubordination that have other law enforcement leaders saying they would have fired one of their officers a long time ago if they did things like that. You might recall mention of “progressive discipline” policies when we reported on an officer out of Fort Wayne Indiana who just rolled up an excessive force incident for his 15th career disciplinary finding… This Polk County deputy has 20 career complaints.as time drags by, how many other agencies will we see apply these new 'progressive' policies in order to keep their thugs?
* A Medina County Ohio deputy has been charged with abduction, dereliction of duty, felonious assault, and unauthorized use of property when he allegedly conspired with jail inmates to have a suspected child molester assaulted. I know, it’s part of popular crime folklore that molesters get the treatment when they are in prison… but this was a person who was supposed to be innocent until proven guilty and, to the best of my knowledge, there is no such thing in the US as being sentenced to a gang beat-down as punishment for any crime.
* An Assumption Parish Louisiana deputy is facing an astounding 538 counts of malfeasance in office, 17 counts of illegally carrying a weapon with narcotics, and a single count of possession with intent to distribute while also being charged with obtaining a dangerous substance through fraud. During a search of the deputy’s home state police discovered 102 evidence envelopes from narcotics investigations and the DA is saying this can jeopardize several hundred cases.
* A Bexar County Texas deputy was arrested in a sting operation for attempting to smuggle heroin into jail after he was identified as the source of drugs being smuggled into the jail.
* Six Burbank California police officers have been fired on allegations of excessive force and other unspecified acts of misconduct related to a 2007 investigation into a robbery at a bakery. Though, there seems to be some contention about some of the firings in counter allegations of retaliation against whistleblowing.
we're watching a report where there are some unanswered questions about a Las Vegas Nevada raid performed on an apartment that a couple had just moved into a month ago that left a father-to-be dead after police claim he allegedly made a “furtive movement” (cop speak used to justify killing a citizen when no weapon is found after the murder) towards one of the heavily armed officers during a drug raid on the residence. But, it’s what hasn’t been said that has me paying close attention to this case.
Normally, when there’s an officer-involved shooting police will be quick to say when the person shot had a weapon, and when they don’t it usually means there wasn’t a weapon involved… also, when something like this happens during a raid police will be quick to justify the use of force by discussing how much drug evidence was seized during the raid, and when they don’t it usually means they didn’t find anything or that it was a botched raid.
The man who was fatally shot has been described as having no criminal record and, while possibly a recreational pot smoker at one time, nobody seems to indicate that he was a dealer of any sort. Furthermore, his pregnant wife, who was hiding in a closet when the raid went down, said they both hid because they believed it was a robbery, indicating the raiders might not have announced before breaking in.
So, for now we have what seems to be a raid where no drugs were found and an unarmed expectant father was shot to death when police startled him when they barged into the bathroom he was hiding in. But, until these lacking details are verified or actual allegations are made, I can’t add it.
www.injusticeeverywhere.com