US police killed 77 people in September

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
"US police killed 77 people throughout the country in September, according to a compendium of local press reports compiled by volunteers on Wikipedia. Over the past week, police have killed at least 14 more people, while judges and prosecutors continued to protect the perpetrators of police violence.

Detroit judge throws out manslaughter charge against officer who killed 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones

Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway tossed out a felony manslaughter charge on Friday against a police officer who shot a 7-year-old girl during a raid in 2010.

Jones was killed as police were executing a “no-knock” search warrant for a homicide suspect in the two-apartment home. The police—members of the heavily armed Special Response Team—threw a flash grenade through an unopened window around 12:45 a.m. before charging in with guns drawn.

Jones’ killer, Joseph Weekley, claimed he was pointing his gun at Stanley-Jones when it accidentally went off, killing her. Hathaway claimed it was not evident that the police officer had been acting with willful negligence. “The entire trial has been about the carelessness of the defendant based on his skills ... Nowhere did I hear anything about a willful negligence,” she said.

On Monday, the Michigan Court of Appeals denied an appeal of the circuit court decision on procedural grounds. "Because the oral granting of the defendant's motion [to dismiss the felony charge] and the trial court's entry of its written order to this effect took place before any appellate review was able to occur, this Court is barred from reviewing the trial court's decision," the appeals court ruled.

A judge on the appeals court acknowledged that the trial court's dismissal of the charge was made in error, but said that no review was allowed.

Florida police officer uses taser on unarmed 61-year-old woman

A police officer in Tallahassee, Florida, was placed on paid leave after he tased an unarmed woman. Nearby residents filmed the incident from their porch on a smartphone. Viola Young, 61, had approached a group of police officers to ask about an arrest. One of the officers, identified as Terry Mahan, is shown attempting to grab Young. When she moved past him, Mahan shot her in the back with a stun gun.

She lay on the ground, paralyzed, for about two minutes before officers helped her to her feet. She was then examined by paramedics and charged with “resisting and obstructing an officer without violence,” a first-degree misdemeanor.

Evidence suggests killing of James Boyd by Albuquerque police was pre-meditated

Two recordings of remarks made by Keith Sandy, one of the two Albuquerque Police Department officers who shot James Boyd in the city’s foothills on March 16, reveal that Sandy had threatened to shoot the mentally ill homeless man two hours before he and Dominique Perez killed him.

The first recording was made on the scene by a State Police sergeant on his dash-cam video and belt-tape audio recording system. Sandy referred to Boyd as a “f***** lunatic” and said, “I’m going to shoot him with (unintelligible) shotgun here in a second,” before clarifying that he was referring to a taser shotgun round.

In an interview with an APD detective 22 days later, Sandy first freely admitted that he had said, but “Jokingly; just kind of locker room banter,” that he would “shoot him in the pecker and call it good.” He abruptly changed his story later in the interview, claiming that he never used the phrase.
Vermont police seize car when owner refused search without warrant

The Vermont ACLU has filed a lawsuit on behalf of Gregory Zullo, charging that state police violated the state’s search and seizure laws. Zullo, 21, had been pulled over last March 6, when police noticed that his license plate registration sticker was covered by a small amount of snow, which is not a violation under Vermont law.

The police officer spent 30 minutes demanding Zullo allow a search of his car. He made no attempt to wipe the snow off the registration sticker or ask Zullo to do it himself. Zullo repeatedly refused the officer’s demands to search the vehicle, an act within his Fourth Amendment rights, insisting the officer produce a warrant. The officer even lied to Zullo, claiming that his drug dog could “smell something” from inside his squad car. In reality, the dog was not even trained to sniff out narcotics.

Finally, the officer called a tow truck and impounded the vehicle to search it later at the police barracks. The officer left Zullo miles from his home in 20-degree weather. When Zullo asked if he could retrieve his cell phone and money from the vehicle, the officer flatly refused. He reportedly told Zullo that getting home was “not my problem” and threatened him with arrest if he tried to retrieve his belongings. Nothing illegal was found in the car after the search and Zullo was not charged with any offense.

Maine state police shoot and kill mentally ill man in highway standoff

Maine State Police shot and killed Shad Gerken, 34, on September 27 in the woods off Route 116. Officers had responded to a call around 10 a.m. about a man walking along the highway with a knife and acting erratically. The interaction turned into a standoff that lasted for eight hours. Officers claim they attempted to talk to Gerken during this time, before shooting and killing him at 6 p.m. The three officers involved were placed on paid leave.

The victim’s family members claim that he had a history of mental illness. “When the police are dealing with a mentally ill man, how do they not get a social worker there to talk to him before they use deadly force?” asked his stepfather, Norman Forsee. “There are other steps they could have taken,” he said."

http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/10/07/poli-o07.html

https://www.rollitup.org/t/official-fuck-the-police-thread-examples-of-police-brutality.557777/
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
Makes perfect sense. Cop messes up, and they go to his best friends the judge and the DA and ask them to put him in prison.

Because we all would be so willing to send our co-workers away and lock them in a cage.

Round and round we go.
 

FrostyPelican

Well-Known Member
This one of the reasons I tell people I know that all the news coverage and attention of Ferguson is a good thing. Many of them, because Mike Brown was black, think the coverage and all the uproar is BS yet they are always complaining about the police. Constant national scrutiny of the police is one of the things that can help bring change. (although I don't see it happening in my lifetime if ever)

I'm not a fan of CNN or Fox but I have to give kudos to CNN. They were on that story and police misconduct like a dog on a bone 24/7 for quite some time.

The perplexing thing about the topic for me is how can millions of people see all the raw footage of cops killing and beating people extrajudicially on sites like youtube yet not even protest. It's like people just don't care as long as it's not them on the receiving end.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Most pistols have at least a 5 pound pull on the trigger, they don't just "go off". Also, police are trained to not have their finger on the trigger unless you actually have to shoot someone, why would you have your finger on the trigger around a 7 year old?

You wanna know why cops never go to prison and are never found guilty? If that happened you would have a tsunami of law suits, cops quitting the force and no one would ever want to be in law enforcement ever again. In this case the Nuremberg defense does actually hold water.
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
What would happen if citizens took matters in their own hands? Would cops keep their jobs and just stop being stupid about certain things?
 

farmasensist

Well-Known Member
I remember hearing about the girl in detroit, she got lit up by an MP5 while sleeping on the couch. Now they are asking about willful negligence? There is no such thing. If it is willfull, it isn't negligence, its murder. negligence cant be willfull.

Its like the baby that got flash banged in Georgia. They ask the grand jury if any criminal action took place and of course they say no because it wasn't done on purpose with a criminal intent, its just an accident that never should have happened but they dont ask the grand jury if the no knock warrant was justified and necessary, or if the procedures they followed were appropriate. They dont ask if the swat's reckless actions endangered people in the house. I think they get away with a lot of this because they box the grand jury in with a black and white quation that is rigged, then they can say the jury has spoken nothing was done wrong.
 

SmokeyDan

Well-Known Member
Law enforcement has a lot of special immunity when it comes to prosecution and cops in the line of duty.

They basically have a blank check to shoot first and ask questions later under the blanket of officer safety.

When did cops get it in their head that their safety was of paramount concern?

It isn't even one of the most dangerous jobs around. Electricians have a higher death and injury rate.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member


Spending looks pretty damn fast when the chart doesn't come from a progressive source.:lol:
so the CBO is a "progressive source", but the CRS isn't?

damn you are stupid.

the only two democrats in your graph both decreased or eliminated the deficit, all the republicans did the opposite.

and every single republican added to public sector employees, obama has reduced public sector employees.

but of course you are too dumb to realize that democrats fix out of control republican growth of government.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Would you rather have 100k making 10%

Or 1 million making 4%?

Because it looks like you can't see the difference.
Yeah, buck doesn't understand that 8% of 1 trillion is actually much much less than 2% of 17 Trillion.

For Unclemathwizbuck 8% of 1 trillion = 80 billion; 2% of 17 trillion = 340 Billion

Money wise, no president has ever spent as much as Obama. In fact all president combined don't even take the shine off the spending trophy of Obama's
 

SmokeyDan

Well-Known Member
I remember hearing about the girl in detroit, she got lit up by an MP5 while sleeping on the couch. Now they are asking about willful negligence? There is no such thing. If it is willfull, it isn't negligence, its murder. negligence cant be willfull.

Its like the baby that got flash banged in Georgia. They ask the grand jury if any criminal action took place and of course they say no because it wasn't done on purpose with a criminal intent, its just an accident that never should have happened but they dont ask the grand jury if the no knock warrant was justified and necessary, or if the procedures they followed were appropriate. They dont ask if the swat's reckless actions endangered people in the house. I think they get away with a lot of this because they box the grand jury in with a black and white quation that is rigged, then they can say the jury has spoken nothing was done wrong.
I know the term willful negligence sounds like a contradiction but it is basically a term for a careless action.

Reckless endangerment sounds like what they should have gone for. But police are likely immune to that charge while carrying out their duties.

So the person going after them is forced to shoehorn it into something that might stick.
 

greenlikemoney

Well-Known Member
Damn, 77 brothers killed in September by the police? Jesse Jackson is racking up the miles with that shit, PLUS trying to collect donations "for the cause" from the Texas Ebola criers.
 
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