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The Day Ferguson Cops Were Caught in a Bloody Lie

 
 
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:12 am
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:15 am
Veteran Dallas Police Officer Arrested For Sexual Assault
December 21, 2014 2:53 PM
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(credit: CBSDFW.COM)



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DALLAS (AP) — A Dallas police officer has been arrested for sexual assault, accused of using his position as a peace officer to force prostitutes to perform sexual acts while he worked an extra job.

Police said Officer David Kattner was arrested early Sunday morning. The 47-year-old remained in Dallas County jail on $50,000 bond Sunday afternoon. Jail records did not list an attorney for him.

Police say Kattner, a 26-year veteran of the department, will be placed on administrative leave pending the results of the ongoing investigation.

Police say as the investigation continues, detectives will try to determine if there are other victims.

A Dallas Police Association spokesman said Sunday afternoon that the group was working on a statement.

(© Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
hawkeye10
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:29 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
A Dallas police officer has been arrested for sexual assault, accused of using his position as a peace officer to force prostitutes to perform sexual acts while he worked an extra job.


As usual we are not given enough information to have any idea of what it is that he is accused of. "force prostitutes to perform sexual acts " could be something like telling two prostitutes to kiss each other, or something more serious, but who knows what he did.

The state should say nothing
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:30 am

Former Derry Twp. police officer accused of stealing prescription drugs from evidence room
Posted 11:12 AM, December 22, 2014, by vwaltz, Updated at 12:35pm, December 22, 2014

DERRY TOWNSHIP (WPMT)-A former Derry Township police officer was charged Monday with stealing prescription drugs from an evidence room at the police station, investigators said.

Authorities charged Sergeant Brian W. Romberger, of Annville, with theft, tampering with physical evidence, possession of a controlled substance and obtaining a controlled substance by fraud.

Romberger, 43, allegedly stole evidence related to at least 11 cases, including Percocet, Oxycodone, Hydrocodone, Alprazolam (Xanax), Tramadol, Opana, Soma, Suboxene, Carispodol and Trazadone, according to documents filed in District Court.

The investigation was came to light back in August after Derry Township police discovered several prescription pills were missing from their secure evidence storage room. An inventory was taken–and while the total number of pills cannot be definitely determined–at minimum 375 pills were unaccounted for, court documents state.

Romberger was the primary evidence custodian at the time. According to the affidavit, Romberger had reported health problems and at times would fall asleep at work or have other difficulties functioning. During an interview with Pennsylvania State Police, Romberger admitted that he took the missing pills and consumed them, according to court documents. He also admitted to having a substance abuse problem.

Romberger waived his right to a preliminary hearing. His formal arraignment is set for February 24.




0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:32 am
@hawkeye10,
Seriously? Are you kidding? More than enough information. Use that lie on your girlfriends.
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:34 am

0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:37 am
Former Milwaukee Police Officer Won’t Be Charged in Death of Black Man in Park

By MONICA DAVEYDEC. 22, 2014


The Milwaukee district attorney, John T. Chisholm, said that a former police officer, Christopher Manney, who fatally shot an unarmed black man, Dontre Hamilton, would not be charged in the episode.
Video by Reuters on Publish Date December 22, 2014. Photo by Morry Gash/Associated Press.

MILWAUKEE — In a case that echoed growing tension over race and policing in other cities, a former Milwaukee police officer who fatally shot an African-American man this year will not face criminal charges, a prosecutor announced on Monday.

Nearly eight months after the death of Dontre D. Hamilton, Milwaukee County’s district attorney concluded that the officer, Christopher Manney, who is white, was defending himself when he shot and killed Mr. Hamilton in April. Witnesses said Mr. Hamilton had grabbed the officer’s baton during an encounter in a downtown park and hit the officer with it or was attempting to, the prosecutor found. Officer Manney fired at least 13, perhaps 14 times.

“This was a tragic incident for the Hamilton family and for the community,” John T. Chisholm, the district attorney, wrote in a 25-page presentation, which was accompanied by lengthy appendices, released on Monday morning. “But, based on all the evidence and analysis presented in this report, I come to the conclusion that Officer Manney’s use of force in this incident was justified self-defense and that defense cannot be reasonably overcome to establish a basis to charge Officer Manney with a crime.”
Photo
Dontre Hamilton Credit Uncredited/Family photo courtesy of Dameion Perkins, via Associated Press

In this city, where the case had led to growing protests in recent weeks even before the decision was announced, members of Mr. Hamilton’s family said they were deeply disappointed and seeking a federal investigation. The United States attorney’s office for Eastern District of Wisconsin said Monday that the Justice Department would review the case.

Law enforcement officials, bracing for more demonstrations after one that blocked an Interstate highway in the Milwaukee area over the weekend, got an executive order from Gov. Scott Walker for the Wisconsin National Guard to stand by, and local leaders called for calm.

“It is my hope that these protests, if they continue — and I anticipate that they will continue — remain peaceful,” Tom Barrett, the mayor of Milwaukee, said at a news conference. Mr. Barrett also noted the shooting deaths of two police officers in New York over the weekend, adding: “We cannot allow all police officers in this nation, all police officers in this city, to be demonized. This is the time for peace.”
Photo
Christopher Manney Credit Milwaukee Police Department, via Associated Press

For months, supporters of Mr. Hamilton had called for charges against Mr. Manney, who was fired from the city police force after the shooting, and anger over the case gained momentum after the mounting protests that followed the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner in New York City. In a largely white state, 40 percent of Milwaukee’s nearly 600,000 residents are black, and some here have called for a more diversified police force and changes in the way police use of force is overseen. About 35 percent of the Milwaukee’s force of 1,900 are minorities, officials said.

The case in Milwaukee “along with the decisions in Ferguson and in New York City have caused many in our society across racial lines to question our system of justice,” James H. Hall Jr., president of the Milwaukee N.A.A.C.P., said on Monday.
Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story
Continue reading the main story

Mr. Hamilton’s death was investigated by an outside agency, the Wisconsin Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation, as required by a recently enacted state law that, in essence, bars a police department from investigating itself in such cases. The prosecutor also sought guidance from a lieutenant with the Greenfield Police Department as well as Emanuel Kapelsohn, of the Peregrine Corporation, whom he described as a leading national expert in use-of-force reviews. Mr. Kapelsohn submitted his report last week, Mr. Chisholm said.
Photo
Dontre Hamilton’s mother, Maria Hamilton, center, and brothers Dameion Perkins, left, and Nate Hamilton leading a protest on Monday in Milwaukee. Credit Morry Gash/Associated Press

The shooting occurred on the afternoon of April 30 after the police received calls from workers at a coffee kiosk in Red Arrow Park downtown about a man sleeping nearby on the ground. A pair of officers twice answered the calls, and determined, according to the prosecutor’s report, that the man, Mr. Hamilton, was not disturbing anyone.

A short time later, Officer Manney, who had apparently received a voice mail message about the situation, went to the park. After he approached Mr. Hamilton, asked him to stand and began a “pat-down frisk” of Mr. Hamilton, there was a struggle. The officer said that Mr. Hamilton had lunged and tried to hit him, and that they then struggled over the officer’s wooden baton.

“The use of deadly force against Dontre Hamilton was not a choice P.O. Manney made voluntarily, but was instead a defensive action forced upon him by Dontre Hamilton’s deadly attack with a police baton,” Mr. Chisholm wrote, quoting from Mr. Kapelsohn’s findings.
Photo
John Chisholm, the Milwaukee County district attorney, at a news conference Monday in Milwaukee about the killing of Dontre Hamilton by a police officer. Credit Morry Gash/Associated Press

Numerous witnesses were there, and some said they had seen Mr. Hamilton trying to hit the officer with the baton.

Mr. Chisholm said it might have taken just three or four seconds to fire as many as 14 shots. “The wound locations and wound paths through the deceased’s body are consistent with shots fired at an attacker who is first advancing toward the officer, then turning and falling.” Mr. Chisholm wrote, quoting Mr. Kapelsohn’s analysis.

Officer Manney was fired from the Police Department on Oct. 15 after the Milwaukee police chief, Edward Flynn, announced a review of the April confrontation had been completed. The officer was not fired for firing his weapon, but for what the chief described as an “out-of-policy pat down” of Mr. Hamilton that Chief Flynn said “was not based on individualized reasonable suspicion but on an assumption of his mental state and housing status.”

In an interview, Chief Flynn said a key issue “lost in an attempt to make it fit into the national narrative was that this incident was about handling a person in mental health crisis and either doing it the right way or the wrong way.”

An attorney for the Hamilton family said Mr. Hamilton, who was 31, had a diagnosed mental illness but was not homeless and had regular contact with his family. “As a family we deserve the truth,” Mr. Hamilton’s brother Nate said in an interview. “They’re telling us this report is everything, but there’s way more information we don’t have.”
hawkeye10
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:37 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
Seriously? Are you kidding? More than enough information.

In an age where the state considers an inadvertent touch of a womans ass a sex act....not.
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bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:38 am
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hawkeye10
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:38 am
@bobsal u1553115,
So three out of our 800000 cops got themselves into legal trouble last month. Thanks for the news update.
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:39 am
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bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:40 am
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:42 am
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:45 am
@hawkeye10,
Listen moron - cops out kill being killed by about 50 to 1. These little mistakes are killing the people of the collective they supposedly serve. Hypocrite.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 01:46 am
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 06:49 am
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 06:52 am
Being a cop showed me just how racist and violent the police are. There’s only one fix.

By Redditt Hudson December 6, 2014
Redditt Hudson, a former cop, works for the NAACP and chairs the board of the Ethics Project.

Police officers drag away a protester to take him into custody during a demonstration against the grand jury decision. (Jim Young/Reuters)

As a kid, I got used to being stopped by the police. I grew up in an inner-ring suburb of St. Louis. It was the kind of place where officers routinely roughed up my friends and family for no good reason.

I hated the way cops treated me.

But I knew police weren’t all bad. One of my father’s closest friends was a cop. He became a mentor to me and encouraged me to join the force. He told me that I could use the police’s power and resources to help my community.

So in 1994, I joined the St. Louis Police Department. I quickly realized how naive I’d been. I was floored by the dysfunctional culture I encountered.

I won’t say all, but many of my peers were deeply racist.

One example: A couple of officers ran a Web site called St. Louis Coptalk, where officers could post about their experience and opinions. At some point during my career, it became so full of racist rants that the site administrator temporarily shut it down. Cops routinely called anyone of color a “thug,” whether they were the victim or just a bystander.

This attitude corrodes the way policing is done.

As a cop, it shouldn’t surprise you that people will curse at you, or be disappointed by your arrival. That’s part of the job. But too many times, officers saw young black and brown men as targets. They would respond with force to even minor offenses. And because cops are rarely held accountable for their actions, they didn’t think too hard about the consequences.

Once, I accompanied an officer on a call. At one home, a teenage boy answered the door. That officer accused him of harboring a robbery suspect, and demanded that he let her inside. When he refused, the officer yanked him onto the porch by his throat and began punching him.

Another officer met us and told the boy to stand. He replied that he couldn’t. So the officer slammed him against the house and cuffed him. When the boy again said he couldn’t walk, the officer grabbed him by his ankles and dragged him to the car. It turned out the boy had been on crutches when he answered the door, and couldn’t walk.

Back at the department, I complained to the sergeant. I wanted to report the misconduct. But my manager squashed the whole thing and told me to get back to work.

I, too, have faced mortal danger. I’ve been shot at and attacked. But I know it’s almost always possible to defuse a situation.

Once, a sergeant and I got a call about someone wielding a weapon in an apartment. When we showed up, we found someone sitting on the bed with a very large butcher knife. Rather than storming him and screaming “put the knife down” like my colleagues would have done, we kept our distance. We talked to him, tried to calm him down.

It became clear to us that he was dealing with mental illness. So eventually, we convinced him to come to the hospital with us.

I’m certain many other officers in the department would have escalated the situation fast. They would have screamed at him, gotten close to him, threatened him. And then, any movement from him, even an effort to drop the knife, would have been treated as an excuse to shoot until their clips were empty.

* * *

I liked my job, and I was good at it.

But more and more, I felt like I couldn’t do the work I set out to do. I was participating in a profoundly corrupt criminal justice system. I could not, in good conscience, participate in a system that was so intentionally unfair and racist. So after five years on the job, I quit.

Since I left, I’ve thought a lot about how to change the system. I’ve worked on police abuse, racial justice and criminal justice reform at the Missouri ACLU and other organizations.

Unfortunately, I don’t think better training alone will reduce police brutality. My fellow officers and I took plenty of classes on racial sensitivity and on limiting the use of force.

The problem is that cops aren’t held accountable for their actions, and they know it. These officers violate rights with impunity. They know there’s a different criminal justice system for civilians and police.

Even when officers get caught, they know they’ll be investigated by their friends, and put on paid leave. My colleagues would laughingly refer to this as a free vacation. It isn’t a punishment. And excessive force is almost always deemed acceptable in our courts and among our grand juries. Prosecutors are tight with law enforcement, and share the same values and ideas.

We could start to change that by mandating that a special prosecutor be appointed to try excessive force cases. And we need more independent oversight, with teeth. I have little confidence in internal investigations.

The number of people in uniform who will knowingly and maliciously violate your human rights is huge. At the Ferguson protests, people are chanting, “The whole damn system is guilty as hell.” I agree, and we have a lot of work to do.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/12/06/i-was-a-st-louis-cop-my-peers-were-racist-and-violent-and-theres-only-one-fix/
bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 06:55 am
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bobsal u1553115
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 06:59 am
Metro police officers arrested in federal corruption investigation

Federal investigation into police corruption
WSB-TV
U.S. Attorney Sally Yates leads a news conference announcing the arrest of 10 metro officers in an undercover corruption investigation.
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ATLANTA —

Ten current and former law enforcement officers across several metro Atlanta agencies have been charged in an undercover police corruption investigation.

Federal agents from the FBI and ATF made most of the arrests Tuesday morning. Channel 2 Action News crews were at the FBI Atlanta office as several suspects were taken into custody. They are accused of taking thousands of dollars in payoffs to drug dealers.

“The breadth of the corruption here is very disturbing,” North Georgia U.S. Attorney Sally Yates said in a 2 p.m. news conference.

She said it all started with an investigation into an identified gang more than a year ago. A gang associate, working with law enforcement, put out word that the gang was in need of dirty cops.

“He got a lot of takers from police officers all over town,” Yates said.

The suspects are two DeKalb police officers, two Forest Park police officers, one Atlanta police officer, one Stone Mountain police officer, one MARTA police officer, two former DeKalb County deputies and one contract officer with the Federal Protective Services.

The investigation covers up to 50 transactions involving cocaine -- the largest worth $7,000. Yates said officers face a slew of charges and performed various services, including providing escorts. Oftentimes, they showed up to the crimes in uniform, Yates said.

“Time after time, they took cash from people they should’ve been arresting,” Yates said.

The officers were identified as Atlanta Police Officer Kelvin Allen, 42, DeKalb County Police officers Dennis Duren, 32, and Dorian Williams, 25, of Stone Mountain, Georgia; Forest Park Police Sergeants Victor Middlebrook, 44, and Andrew Monroe, 57, MARTA Police Officer Marquez Holmes, 45, Stone Mountain Police Officer Denoris Carter, 42, and contract Federal Protective Services Officer Sharon Peters, 43. Agents also arrested former DeKalb County Sheriff’s jail officers Monyette McLaurin, 37, and Chase Valentine, 44.

Authorities do not believe they were necessarily working together.

Five non-law enforcement suspects were also targeted: Shannon Bass, 38, of Atlanta, Elizabeth Coss, 35, of Atlanta, Gregory Lee Harvey, 26, of Stone Mountain, Alexander B. Hill, 22, of Ellenwood and Jerry B. Mannery, Jr., 38, of Tucker. Their roles are unclear.

Channel 2 Action News began looking into the case after receiving a tip Monday night. Channel 2 investigative reporter Mark Winne questioned one of the suspects as agents took him into custody Tuesday morning.

"Wasn't me, brother," the man said as he entered the FBI building.

Channel 2 Action News reporter Eric Philips tried to question Holmes as he was released on bond, but he remained silent.

Yates stressed that the alleged crimes don’t accurately represent law enforcement as a whole.

“It’s very important to remember that the vast major of police officers are honest, hardworking folks,” she said.
0 Replies
 
Builder
 
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Reply Sat 3 Jan, 2015 07:00 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
The number of people in uniform who will knowingly and maliciously violate your human rights is huge. At the Ferguson protests, people are chanting, “The whole damn system is guilty as hell.” I agree, and we have a lot of work to do.


Those are the keywords of the protest; "The whole damn system is guilty as hell".

The Police are a tiny aspect of the corruption endemic in the system. An agent of injustice only.
 

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