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The Day Ferguson Cops Were Caught in a Bloody Lie

 
 
giujohn
 
  0  
Reply Sat 28 Mar, 2015 06:01 pm
@RABEL222,
Quote:
Yes he would. He dident care for blacks.

And neither does sharpton.
0 Replies
 
NSFW (view)
RABEL222
 
  2  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 12:13 am
@giujohn,
I wasent talking about Booker T. Washington as all you brain dead pricks well know. I was talking about George Washington Our first president. You know, the guy that chopped down the cherry tree ans couldent tell a lie. Oh, thats the problem all you geniuses dont know proper history. You think the cherry tree thing is true. So google George and slavery and see what you get.
BillRM
 
  0  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 06:04 am
@RABEL222,
Quote:
I wasent talking about Booker T. Washington as all you brain dead pricks well know


Sorry but you can not get away with such a stupid stupid error in that manner as the article that everyone was referring to clearly, repeat clearly was referring to Booker T. Washington not George Washington.

Nor would there had been any other reason when posting about that article to refer to George Washington and when doing so only using the last name!

As far as us knowing what the hell you was talking about it took some time to figure out that due to the two men having the same last name you somehow confused a man born into the end of slavery with the first president of the US.

That is one amazing error that you are not making better by not admitting to it.
0 Replies
 
NSFW (view)
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 04:46 pm
BREAKING: Alabama Cop Who Violently Assaulted Sureshbhai Patel Indicted by Federal Grand Jury

by Steven DFollow

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94 Comments / 94 New

You might remember the story of the officer Eric Parker of the Madison, Alabama police department, who violently threw to the ground an Indian native, Sureshbhai Patel, apparently because he couldn't speak English. Patel ended up hospitalized and suffers from paralysis after the police officer did this to him on February 6th after stopping him from walking in the neighborhood where Mr. Patel's son, daughter-in-law and grandchild live (TRIGGER WARNING- Graphic violence depicted):

While Eric Parker's termination from the Madison Police Department is on appeal, a Federal Grand Jury has indicted him for civil rights violations in regards to the excessive use of force he employed against Mr. Patel.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Birmingham announced Friday that Madison Police Officer Eric Parker has been indicted on civil rights violations charges. [...]

The FBI conducted a civil rights inquiry and turned over its findings to the U.S. Department of Justice. [...]

[Patel's attorney, Hank] Sherrod released this statement after the indictment was announced:

“Mr. Patel and his family are very pleased by the prompt and decisive action of U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance and the federal grand jury. For the public to trust police officers, it needs to know officers will be held accountable, and the felony civil rights charges filed against Parker, unlike the misdemeanor assault charge being pursued in state court, more accurately reflect the seriousness of Parker’s conduct.

Mr. Patel and his family are also deeply thankful for the continued support and concern of the local community and the general public. With the wind of these good thoughts and prayers at his back, through hard work and with the help of skilled and caring therapists at Healthsouth Rehabilitation Center in Huntsville, Mr. Patel has made tremendous progress in his recovery. Recently, Mr. Patel was able to walk a short distance on his own using a walker, an important milestone in his recovery. In the near future, Mr. Patel expects to be released to the home of his son, Chirag, where he will continue his therapy.”

U.S. Attorney Joyce White Vance had the following to say regarding the charges against Eric Parker for deprivation of rights under color of law with respect to his excessive use of force in slamming Mr. Patel to ground on a concrete sidewalk.

"Police officers are sworn to uphold the law and protect the public," said Vance in a prepared statement today. "The public must be able trust the police."

During a press conference in Birmingham, Vance said the federal charge carries a maximum of 10 years in prison. Parker, 26, also faces trial in Limestone County on April 29 on a charge of misdemeanor assault, which carries up to one year in jail.

What happened to Mr. Patel was outrageous. Thankfully, the FBI and the Department of Justice moved swiftly to deal with this violent act of unwarranted violent and criminal assault on an innocent man, who had every right to be walking in the neighborhood where his son lived. Mr. Patel had recently come to America to help with childcare responsibilities of his grandchild. He deserved far better treatment from the law enforcement community, which far too often doesn't promote public safety or protect people, but instead acts like a lawless gang of thugs above the law. Hopefully, Eric Parker will be convicted for his actions and serve time in a federal prison for this violent assault.

UPDATE: Copy of Federal indictment is at this link.

Originally posted to Steven D on Fri Mar 27, 2015 at 10:52 AM PDT.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 04:52 pm
@coldjoint,
You aren't fit to carry Ernie Chamber's water. You're way to uninformed to have any sort of valid opinion about him. In a Republican state with 2% black population Ernie Chambers has been re-elected for almost thirty years.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 04:53 pm
@coldjoint,
Link! Thats rich coming from you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 04:56 pm
@izzythepush,
Seriously??? Did ol' Bill really say that crap???
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 04:58 pm
@Frank Apisa,
Quote:
You sound like an ignoramus when you get those wrong.


He doesn't only sound like an ignoramus, he is an ignoramus.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 05:07 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Pretty much. He views watching child pornography as a victimless crime. His argument being that the crime has already happened and that nobody makes any money out of it. He takes great pains to describe viewers of child pornography as viewers of child pornography and not paedophiles. And he had to return one of his pornographic videos to the retailer because he feared the model was underage.

If that's not being an apologist for child pornography I don't know what is.
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 05:09 pm
@coldjoint,
Link, dipstick.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 05:35 pm
Fri Mar 27, 2015 at 12:29 PM PDT
No Jonathan Capehart: Hands Up, Don't Shoot is not a "Lie"

by Frank Vyan WaltonFollow

Following the Release of the first Justice Department Report on the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson Missouri, a new narrative has begun to be formed.

Headed by this article from Jonathan Capehart it is now claimed, without hesitation or pause, that the source for the "Hands Up, Don't Shoot" movement, was built entirely on a Lie.

Video Statement By Capehart


The DOJ report notes on page 44 that Johnson “made multiple statements to the media immediately following the incident that spawned the popular narrative that Wilson shot Brown execution-style as he held up his hands in surrender.” In one of those interviews, Johnson told MSNBC that Brown was shot in the back by Wilson. It was then that Johnson said Brown stopped, turned around with his hands up and said, “I don’t have a gun, stop shooting!” And, like that, “hands up, don’t shoot” became the mantra of a movement. But it was wrong, built on a lie.

These are pretty strong words, and fairly strong sentiment particularly from an author who is largely known for his more Liberal leanings. It of course deserves a fair and thorough response which I hope to provide both Capehart and the DOJ on the other side of the flip.

The first issue to address is the sweeping scope of Capehart's statement. That essentially all those who claimed that they saw Michael Brown shot at while he was fleeing or while his hands were in the air, or that he ever put his hands in the air, are not simply mistaken or confused but are perpetrating a deliberate lie. Starting with Dorian Johnson who first went on tv to give his view of the events that day, Capehart argues that his story then tainted all the others and caused a cascade effect that skewed the testimony and accounts of all others who might be sympathetic to innocent and/or unarmed persons being shot down by police.

The accusation that this was all a "Lie" indicates that the DOJ must have definitively proven that it simply wasn't possible for Brown to have been shot at while his back was turned or his hands were raised based on the cold hard forensic evidence.

The problem is that the DOJ doesn't say anything of the kind.

From Page 7

After the initial shooting inside the SUV, the evidence establishes that Brown ran eastbound on Canfield Drive and Wilson chased after him. The autopsy results confirm that Wilson did not shoot Brown in the back as he was running away because there were no entrance wounds to Brown’s back. The autopsy results alone do not indicate the direction Brown was facing when he received two wounds to his right arm, given the mobility of the arm. However, as detailed later in this report, there are no witness accounts that could be relied upon in a prosecution to prove that Wilson shot at Brown as he was running away. Witnesses who say so cannot be relied upon in a prosecution because they have given accounts that are inconsistent with the physical and forensic evidence or are significantly inconsistent with their own prior statements made throughout the investigation.

From Page 19

Given the mobility of the arm, it is impossible to determine the position of the body relative to the shooter at the time the arm wounds were inflicted. Therefore, the autopsy results do not indicate whether Brown was facing Wilson or had his back to him. They do not indicate whether Brown sustained those two arm wounds while his hands were up, down, or by his waistband. The private forensic pathologist opined that he would expect a re-entry wound across Brown’s stomach if Brown’s hand was at his waistband at the time Wilson fired. However, as mentioned, there is no way to know the exact position of Brown’s arm relative to his waistband at the time the bullets struck. Therefore, these gunshot wounds neither corroborate nor discredit Wilson’s account or the account of any other witness. However, the concentration of bullet wounds on Brown’s right side is consistent with Wilson’s description that he focused on Brown’s right arm while shooting.

From Page 81.

The evidence does not support concluding that Wilson shot Brown while Brown’s back
was toward Wilson. Witnesses, such as Witness 118, Witness 128, Witness 139 and others, who claim to have seen Wilson fire directly into Brown’s back, gave accounts that lack credibility because the physical evidence establishes that there were no entry wounds to Brown’s back, although there was a wound to the anatomical back of Brown’s right arm, and a graze wound to Brown’s right arm.

Clearly and consistently the DOJ Forensic analysis Does Not rule out the possibility that the shooting may have occurred in the manner that witnesses such as Dorian Johnson have described. They very specifically say that they can't prove or disprove any of these claims definitively. Therefore claiming that anyone who says they saw Brown raise his arms is a "LIAR" is more than a little strong. It's completely uncalled for based on the DOJ's own analysis.

Now, I should stop right here. I should call it and say this is done, this is over, and Capehart has simply made a mistake and overstated his case.

But obviously that's not going to satisfy those who've now jumped onto the Capehart bandwagon in exactly the same way that Capehart accuses those who agree with Dorian Johnson of doing.

Case in point, which is something I received in my inbox, and prompted this diary.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/...

How many diaries about this do you think will show up on The Daily KOS?
(I'm thinking zero - and that's being generous)

Unfortunately, the race-baiters at KOS will not learn the lesson that Capehard did.
That's why this guy writes for the Washington Post ... and you guys write for KOS.

What do "you people" call writers like Capehart?
Uncle Toms? Oreo cookies? Or just Assholes?

Name-calling is always the last refuge ... of those who lost the debate.

What I call Capehart, in this case, is "Wrong". The Forensics do not disprove Dorian Johnson, and to further that point, let me let Dr. Cyril Wecht explain why.



Dr. Wecht: I don't like to be dogmatic, but there is only one way this scenario plays out when you look at the bullet wounds. There are two wounds, one in the forearm entering dorsally and exiting in the front and the other in the upper arm entering in the front and exiting in the back. Both had an upward trajectory. Michael Brown was 6' 5", Officer Wilson is 6'.

The only way that you have an upward trajectory is with the arm like this [Holds his hand up to shoulder height, palm facing forward] and the shots fired. And you have two shots that strike Michael Brown in the chest, and they both have a downward trajectory. How do you get that with a 6'5" guy being shot by a 6' guy? And then you have two wounds in the head that a parallel to the ground. When you put the body on the table, their perpendicular.

The only way you can get that is that his body is continuing to fall. The scenario is that Michael Brown was shot first in the arm, then as he is beginning to fall he is shot in the chest, and as he continues to fall he shot in the head. And he falls prone. He's 30-35' away.

What happened at the car is significant mostly because, and no one talks about this, for what was Officer Darren Wilson's attitude? Was he teed off? "This kid has just struggled with me with my gun" and the kid is now 30-35' away. He's unarmed, he's in short pants and a t-shirt. Where is this imminent threat? If he believes that this kid is a threat to his life then how in the world can he be out there as a police officer, dealing with people that have weapons, dealing with people that are really berzerk and people that really pose a serious threat?

No, this is [an] absurd scenario as far as I'm concerned in terms of Wilson's defense.

Now, Wecht made this statement fairly early on when the information was that Brown had only travelled 35ft and that Wilson was only 6'1" tall (Brown actually travelled 180 ft and Wilson is 6'4" tall, the same height as Brown) but the key details of what he's saying remain relevant. The bullet wound pattern doesn't show a shot "in the back" but it does indicate that Brown was shot at while facing away and may have been in in the back of the right arm, then turned and was further hit in the forearm as he raised his hands upward. To help me explain this I have placed below the autopsy sketch, to which I have added a count of the wounds and their position for clarity.
The DOJ establishes that wound #1 to Brown's thumb occurred in the car. There is gun shot residue in the wound track, the bullet lodged in the door. The DOJ does not say that this confirms that Brown "tried to grab the gun", it only proves that his hand was in proximity of the weapon when it was fired. Brown's blood was found inside the car, in fact much of it was found on Wilson and on his hands since this would have been an high velocity impact spray. Some of his blood was also found outside the car on the door panel.

What I want to focus on however is wound #3 to Brown's bicep. As Wecht explains, as it's shown in the diagram that is an Exit Wound. There is a matching entry wound on back side of Brown's arm so the question I have is how did that wound happen?

If we are to follow Wilson's story, which the DOJ - and hence Capehart - takes as gospel line by line, Wilson never fired while Brown was facing away from him. So exactly how does he get a bullet wound that enters the back of his bicep and exits through the front?

http://images.dailykos.com/images/135917/large/Autopsy_diagram.jpg?1427474623

The DOJ does not even attempt to explain this. They don't even try. Logically speaking the only way for this wound to occur while Wilson is firing while he is facing front is that His. Arms. Are. UP. In fact, for this to happen his arm would have to have been raised so high that his elbow would have been above his head and no one, I mean No one, ever suggested that Brown ever put his arms in that position. Another even more remote possibility is that he place his arms in a outstretched Christ-like pose, with his palms turn upward or nearly backward so that the back of his bicep was facing forward somehow.

Clearly, there are no witnesses who claimed that he did some odd airplane maneuver with his arms either which means that the most likely scenario - although not definitive - is that he was facing away while this shot occurred and several of the witness did see him react to being hit, they just thought it was in his back when in fact it was in the back of his arm.

So in this case they weren't "lying" they were just wrong - by a few inches to the right.

Now let me return to Wound #2 which is a graze wound to the forearm. This shot is going the opposite direction to Wound #3 which again indicates that the subject turned around at some point while the shooting continued, but then many things are possible with this wound as this part of the arm could be turned in many different directions and many different angles - more so than the bicep. But let's not assume, let's take Wilson at his word as the DOJ does and consider that this occurred from the front which is very possible. If it did there are two primary possibilities 1) that Brown had his hands down with his palms facing forward in the same manner as shown by the sketch or 2) that Brown had his hands raised with his palms forward as the bullet grazed his forearm. It could easily be either, but if it were the later where Brown's arm was up then then there would be another wound because that bullet continued to travel and the next thing it would hit would either be Brown's shoulder or upper chest as a re-entry wound depending on the position of his hand. And lo and behold, Brown does have a wound to his shoulder/upper bicep (#4) and to his upper right chest (#5) either of which could in fact be that very re-entry wound following the graze to his forearm.

Of course this isn't absolute proof that he was shot at while facing away, or that he was shot while his hands were up, but as Wecht points out and the DOJ report admits you can not DISPROVE this possibility. It's all very possible, and quite logical based on the bullet entry and exit wounds.

Unfortunately a possibility isn't enough to get a conviction so I can see why the DOJ didn't indict, but to then go on and claim any of this is impossible is going a few steps too far on a broken bridge.

The other claim that Capehart makes is that the DOJ found NO CREDIBLE witnesses who professed to see Brown raise his arms because they either changed their story, or they made statements that did not fit the physical evidence like Dorian's claim that Brown "never put his hands inside the police car" even though his blood and skin cells were found there and that he "only took a few steps" and never ran toward Wilson even though the crime scene documentation shows that after he retreated 180 ft from the police car, Brown turned back and moved 21.6ft back toward it before finally falling and stopping.

He says this:

What DOJ found made me ill. Wilson knew about the theft of the cigarillos from the convenience store and had a description of the suspects. Brown fought with the officer and tried to take his gun. And the popular hands-up storyline, which isn’t corroborated by ballistic and DNA evidence and multiple witness statements, was perpetuated by Witness 101. In fact, just about everything said to the media by Witness 101, whom we all know as Dorian Johnson, the friend with Brown that day, was not supported by the evidence and other witness statements.

But the DOJ did find other credible witnesses who corroborated key parts of Dorian Johnson's story.

According to Witness 104, she was leaning over, talking to her sister, Witness 107, when
she heard two gunshots. She looked out the front window and saw Brown at the driver’s window of Wilson’s SUV. Witness 104 knew that Brown’s arms were inside the SUV, but she could not see what Brown and Wilson were doing because Brown’s body was blocking her view. Witness 104 saw Brown run from the SUV, followed by Wilson, who “hopped” out of the SUV and ran after him while yelling “stop, stop, stop.” Wilson did not fire his gun as Brown ran from him. Brown then turned around and “for a second” began to raise his hands as though he may have considered surrendering, but then quickly “balled up in fists” in a running position and “charged” at Wilson. Witness 104 described it as a “tackle run,” explaining that Brown “wasn’t going to stop.” Wilson fired his gun only as Brown charged at him, backing up as Brown came toward him. Witness 104 explained that there were three separate volleys of shots. Each time, Brown ran toward Wilson, Wilson fired, Brown paused, Wilson stopped firing, and then Brown charged again. The pattern continued until Brown fell to the ground, “smashing” his face upon impact.

Wilson did not fire while Brown momentarily had his hands up. Witness 104 explained that it took some time for Wilson to fire, adding that she “would have fired sooner.” Wilson did not go near Brown’s body after Brown fell to his death.
Witness 104 explained that she first saw Brown’s friend, Witness 101, when he took off
running as soon as the first two shots were fired. She never saw him again.
All three of Witness 104’s statements were consistent with each other, consistent with the
physical and forensic evidence, and consistent with other credible witness accounts.

Witness 104 does not have a criminal history. Therefore, if called as a defense witness in a prosecution of Darren Wilson, this witness’s account would not be vulnerable to meaningful cross– examination and would not be subject to impeachment due to bias or inconsistencies in prior statements. Accordingly, after a thorough review of all the evidence, federal prosecutors determined her account to be credible, and likewise determined that a jury appropriately would credit her potential testimony.

The DOJ decided they found this witness "credible" and proclaimed that everything they said matched the forensics and their story never changed or wavered. Ok, fine, but this witness said - at least momentarily - that Brown put his Hands Up. They also say that there were "three volleys" of shots, where Wilson only fired when Brown advanced, then stopped, advanced, stopped and then advanced again.

http://images.dailykos.com/images/118294/large/brownshootingaudio.png?1417487381

But that didn't happen and we know it didn't happen because there is a recording of the shooting and it only shows two volleys of gun fire after the initial single shot at the car window.

As I've stated previously:

There is a cluster of six shots, approximately a 3 second gap and then another set of 4-5 shots. Wilson claims that he didn't start the second volley of shooting until after Brown stopped and turned. That means that for at least 6.5 seconds, Brown was coming at him at a 'full run", yet the Police diagram of the scene shows that he only traveled a total of 21 Feet during this 6.5 seconds.

If we can discount Dorian Johnson because he was wrong about Brown's hand being inside the car, then we can discount this witness because they are clearly wrong about the number of shot volleys and the timing of them. That doesn't mean that either of them didn't also get some things right, it's just that being a witnesses isn't an all or nothing proposition. Just like on pop quiz some people may be right on some answers and wrong on others, what we should look at is the totality of witness statements that do comport with the other known facts.

And then there really were witnesses who completely made up their story as did Witness #140.

Witness 140 is a 45-year-old white female who gave two statements to law enforcement and testified before the county grand jury. Witness 140 contacted SLCPD detectives in September 2014, claiming to have been a witness to the shooting of Brown, but too fearful to come forward when it happened. She explained that she decided it was time to come forward because she knew the case was being presented to the county grand jury and she was “tired of hearing that the officer is guilty.” SLCPD and the FBI jointly interviewed Witness 140, who completely corroborated Wilson’s account. Although the physical and forensic evidence was consistent with her account, the timing of her disclosure and the details of her narrative caused investigators to question her veracity. Therefore, federal prosecutors and agents conducted a follow-up interview.

The DOJ found this witness story matched Forensics, but it's also that it's very likely this person wasn't even at the scene at all and perjured herself before the Grand Jury.

Witness 140 was twice convicted of passing bad checks, felonies that are crimes of dishonesty and likely admissible in federal court as impeachment evidence. Although Witness 140’s account of this incident is consistent with physical and forensic evidence and with credible witness accounts, large parts of her narrative have been admittedly fabricated from media accounts, and her bias in favor of Wilson is readily apparent. Accordingly, while her account likely is largely accurate, federal prosecutors determined that the account as a whole was not reliable and therefore did not consider it when making a prosecutive decision.

So when it comes to people being impacted by media reports which tend to shade their testimony, that actual event seemed to have happened to this witness, who just so happens to support the story claimed by Darren Wilson, not Dorian Johnson.

When making his accusation that the media spread lies perpetrated by Dorian Johnson, Capehart never bothers to even mention this witness at all.

If we were to entirely discount every witness who changed aspects of their story of got critical details wrong - then the first person we should throw on the trash heap is former Officer Darren Wilson. For starters, as HuPo has reported, he changed his story.

In his first interview with the detective, just hours after Brown’s death, Wilson didn’t claim to have any knowledge that Brown was suspected of stealing cigarillos from a nearby convenience store. The only mention of cigarillos he made to the detective was a recollection of the call about the theft that had come across his radio and that provided a description of the suspect.

Wilson also told the detective that Brown had passed something off to his friend before punching Wilson in the face. At the time, the detective said, Wilson didn’t know what the item was, referring to it only as “something.” In subsequent interviews and testimony, however, Wilson claimed that he knew Brown’s hands were full of cigarillos and that fact eventually led him to believe Brown may have been a suspect in the theft.

Wilson told SLCPD investigators nothing about seeing the cigarillos in Brown's hand. He didn't mention anything about the "Stealing" at the Ferguson Market when he called for backup - which is a rather odd admission since he had heard and acknowledged that call when it went out. He didn't tell investigators that he recognized Brown as the suspect in the Ferguson Market. He didn't bring up any of this.

Not until later. Not until the Store Video footage was played on TV.

And I'm not the only one to notice this change, the FBI noticed it too and questioned Wilson about it. They say in the report they were "satisfied" with his answers but they don't bother to explain just what those answers were and why he said one thing on the day of the shooting and something completely different later on to the FBI and Grand Jury. But he did.

Secondly Wilson's claims about what happened at the car don't match the physical evidence either. He claimed to the Grand Jury and to the FBI that Brown "punched him several times with his Right hand". Somehow he also had a few packs of cigarillos in the hand at the same time, but let just deal with the first issue which is illustrated by the WaPO below.
WaPo Testimony

http://images.dailykos.com/images/118316/large/4_Prosecutor.jpg?1417522169

Wilson: Brown punched him at least twice. "I see him ducking and … his hands are up and he is coming in my vehicle. I was hit right here in the side of the face with a fist … I think my arm deflected some of it, but there was still a significant amount of contact that was made to my face." He said he tried to hold Brown's right arm. "The only way I can describe it is I felt like a five-year-old holding onto Hulk Hogan." He said Brown then handed the cigarillos to Johnson.

As you can see from the illustration the described position of their bodies with Brown punching with his right hand would have made the most likely impact position to be on the Left Side of Wilson's face.

But he didn't have any visible injuries on the left side of his face.

Wilson's bruise was on the Right Side...

http://images.dailykos.com/images/118326/large/wilson1_original.jpg?1417526474

And the back of his neck...

http://images.dailykos.com/images/118325/large/wilson2_original.jpg?1417526474

He doesn't have a split lip. He's doesn't have a black eye. That's not consistent with someone the size and strength of "Hulk Hogan" throwing haymakers at your head from outside a car window.

http://images.dailykos.com/images/118327/large/wilson_front.jpg?1417526860

As you can see from this frontal view, there is no injury to the left side of Wilson's face.
The final point and final justification for Wilson firing the last deadly shots is the claim that Brown "Charged" him, head down, like a football player. Like Wecht, I find this claim totally ridiculous. Someone running in that position can't see where they're going so just like a bull you can easily side-step them without either of you being harmed. Even further a person in that position is off-balance and likely to fall on their face, which is exactly what Brown did right after suffering wounds #6 and #7 to the eye-socket and top of his head.

But the real kicker is the timing. Thanks to the audio recording we know that the last two volleys of shots took place in 6.5 seconds. We also now know due to the blood trail analysis that Brown travelled 21.6ft in those 6.5 seconds. But here's another thing - he actually didn't go that far on his feet, that's just how long the trail is which ends at his head which is where the final bullet wounds are. He FELL the last 6'4", so in reality he only travelled 15' forward in 6.5 seconds.

So the question is, how fast is that "charge"? That's 2.3 ft per second. Even without doing any further math, I can tell that's walking speed. One step per second, 24-30 inches each step. Seven Steps. [Which again shows that when Dorian Johnson said a "few" steps he wasn't all that wrong]

It's an average speed of 1.53 MPH.

That's a "Charge"? That's an imminent threat that has to be handled with deadly force?

So we have one Witness who changed his story, whose claims don't match the physical evidence on his own body during the altercation at the car, whose claims that he never fired at Brown while he was facing away or when his hands may have been up are NOT PROVEN in either case, and whose claim that Brown "Charged" him is very likely a total fabrication and what he really saw was Brown stumbling as he fell forward onto his face from the gun shot wounds he already suffered.

That witness clearly can't be trusted.

That witness is someone who should have been treated as a murder suspect, but wasn't either by the SLCPD, the St Louis Prosecutor or the FBI. Why with all these inconsistencies is this witness treated as a definitive "authority" on the events yet others, whose claims actually fit the forensics just as well if not better are dismissed?

Hmm...

Perhaps that's the question Capehart should have pursued, but unfortunately didn't.

The fact is that the DOJ report does not prove that "Hands Up, Don't Shoot" was "Built on a Lie", but it similarly doesn't prove that Darren Wilson isn't also a Liar as well as a Killer.

It just shows they couldn't have proven that and also that Wilson deliberately violated Brown's civil rights beyond a reasonable doubt in court.

Vyan
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 05:37 pm


Fri Mar 27, 2015 at 11:45 AM PDT
SF Sheriff's deputies forced inmates to train and fight cage matches, gamble for food

by Walter Einenkel

http://images.dailykos.com/images/135949/large/Jean-Leon_Gerome_Pollice_Verso.jpg?1427481396

Reposted from weinenkel by a2nite
2000 years ago
Public Defender Jeff Adachi played a disturbing audio interview with San Francisco jail inmate Ricardo Garcia at a press conference yesterday. In it are very serious allegations of truly sadistic behavior on the part of a handful of sheriff's deputies.

Since the beginning of March, at least four deputies at County Jail No. 4 at 850 Bryant St. threatened inmates with violence or withheld food if they did not fight each other, gladiator-style, for the entertainment of the deputies, Public Defender Jeff Adachi said.

Adachi said the ringleader in these fights was Deputy Scott Neu, who was accused in 2006 of forcing inmates to perform sexual acts on him. That case was settled out of court.

The press conference detailed an atmosphere of real horror, where deputies continuously threatened inmates, forced them to "train" for fights, and gamble for food. Adachi began this probe, conducted by a private investigative team, after the father of one of the inmates contacted him a couple of weeks ago. The allegations are insane:

Neu told Garcia and Harris that if they required medical attention, they were to lie and say they fell off a bunk, Garcia said.

“And he told me anything goes,” he said. “Just don’t punch the face, so no one can basically see the marks. But anything goes, other than the face.” [...]

Harris [inmate Stanley Harris], in another recorded conversation with Adachi, said Neu once made him do 200 push-ups within an hour as part of “training.” As he did his push-ups, Neu threatened to anally rape him, telling him “he’ll take my cheeks,” Harris said.

The four deputies accused have been placed on paid administrative leave. Their lawyer Harry Stern:

“The hypocrisy of Adachi engaging in trial by one-sided press conference cannot go unchallenged: He has done a cursory sham investigation by interviewing a few inmates over a scant two days rather than having the decency to request a serious impartial investigation,” Stern said in a statement. “It is unfortunate that Mr. Adachi didn’t initiate a formal complaint that would have been investigated thoroughly by the appropriate agencies. The investigators would have had the opportunity to interview witnesses, including the accused deputies, and look for physical evidence.” [...]

“A deputy may have encouraged one inmate to work out. The deputy may have also allowed two inmates to wrestle in order to settle a dispute about who was stronger,” he added. “The 'wrestling’ was essentially little more than horseplay. There was no betting. The inmates were never forced to work out. They were never forced to fight.”

According to the L.A. Times:

Neu was named in two federal civil rights lawsuits in 2006 and 2008 alleging he harassed a female inmate and two male-to-female transgender inmates in the jail, and forced them to perform sex acts on him.

The lawsuits resulted in settlements, records show. Neu was reassigned to inmate transport, said Adante Pointer, who represented all three plaintiffs.

San Francisco's deputies and detectives may be a big problem right now and San Francisco is a liberal city.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 05:40 pm

Fri Mar 27, 2015 at 09:46 AM PDT
Officer Bill 'Robocop' Melendez named in 12 brutality and corruption lawsuits

by Shaun King

http://images.dailykos.com/images/135887/large/William_Bill_Robocop_Melendez.jpg?1427467916

Reposted from shaunking by a2nite
William Bill Robocop Melendez
attribution: Screenshots from LinkedIn and Security Website
William Bill Robocop Melendez
Before Bill "Robocop" Melendez brutally assaulted 57-year-old Ford Motor employee Floyd Dent this past January, he was named in 12 separate lawsuits for brutally assaulting people, planting evidence, and making illegal arrests. One case, though, sounds shockingly familiar to what Melendez did to Floyd Dent—who was choked unconscious before Melendez punched him 16 times in the face and head breaking his orbital bone, causing severe bleeding, and a brain injury.

A federal judge recently dismissed Melendez's petition for "qualified immunity" in an extreme case of brutality and wrongful arrest that took place on July 26, 2011. After reviewing the evidence, District Court Judge Gershwin Drain determined that Melendez and several of the officers under his command used illegal force against Deshawn Acklin and that they would not be protected under the qualified immunity clause.

On July 26, 2011, Bill "Robocop" Melendez brutally beat and choked Deshawn Acklin until he was completely unconscious and defecated on himself. Melendez did not stop the beating until he was pulled off of Deshawn Acklin by fellow officers. Later, fellow officers sprayed Acklin with mace when he was handcuffed in the back seat of the police car. They never even charged him with a crime, but let him go out of the back door of the local jail after they took him to the hospital for his injuries.

In addition to the extreme brutality, it appears that Melendez, as he is currently trying to do with Floyd Dent, concocted a story about what Acklin did that day to deserve such a beating.



1. On pages 5-6 of the court filing below, Melendez claims that he looked through a window with four fellow officers and saw Deshawn and another man in the house with guns. Every other officer interviewed has no recollection of such an occurrence. Deshawn himself has stated explicitly from the beginning that he never even touched a gun inside of the house.

2. Melendez testified that he "heard voices in the kitchen area" from outside of the house. In their testimony, no other officers heard those voices. Deshawn states in his testimony that nobody was even in the kitchen, but that he and friends were hanging out in the living room.

3. This is key: On page 7 of the court filing, Melendez states that he sees Deshawn pull a handgun out of his waistband. None of the four additional officers testified to seeing such a thing.

4. On page 7, Melendez testified that Deshawn, in the presence of five heavily armed officers, closed his fist and took a swing at the face of Melendez. No other officer witnessed such a thing and, of course, Deshawn stated from the beginning that this was preposterous.

5. Melendez, stating that it was in self-defense, then admitted to punching Deshawn in each eye until he was unconscious and then "holding on to him for a controlled fall." Several officers actually testified that no such thing happened and that Deshawn hit the floor hard and was immediately swarmed by Melendez.

6. On page 8, Melendez stated that he couldn't find the "use of force" and "injured prisoner" reports, but that he eventually found them and completed them. Now, they conveniently don't exist.

7. Officer Randazzo, in his testimony, states that he never heard anyone talking outside of the house. He never saw Deshawn with a gun. He testified that when Melendez broke down the door of the kitchen that it was completely empty. Melendez, you will recall, stated that Deshawn was in the kitchen with a gun out.

8. Officer Schewe who was on scene with a K-9, testified that at no time was anyone told before entering the house that Melendez or anyone else saw a gun present.

Read the full statement from the judge below. It gives you a deep and ugly glimpse into the brutality of Melendez and his team.

Federal Court Decision against William (Bill) Robocop Melendez in the brutality case with Plaintiff Deshawn...
Originally posted to shaunking on Fri Mar 27, 2015 at 09:09 AM PDT.

Federal Indictment at link:

https://www.scribd.com/doc/260124740/Federal-Court-Decision-against-William-Bill-Robocop-Melendez-in-the-brutality-case-with-Plaintiff-Deshawn-Acklin
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 05:45 pm


Thu Mar 26, 2015 at 11:18 AM PDT
Illinois State Police raid St. Louis area police dept. over missing gun and drugs from evidence room

by Jen Hayden

Reposted from Scout Finch by a2nite
Illinois state police collecting evidence at the Brooklyn, IL police department
A Brooklyn, Illinois police department is in hot water after one of their detectives was featured posing with evidence, evidence that is still missing:

Allegations against the Brooklyn Police Department include mishandling of evidence. Former detective Chris Heatherly is accused of taking an AR-15 rifle out of an evidence locker and keeping it in the trunk of his car. Heatherly is also accused of posing for a picture with the rifle in hand. The photo was used in a police department calendar.

In a letter, St. Clair County's State's Attorney said the action is flagrant violation of police protocol and said it breached the integrity of the evidence in the case. The prosecutor also said he would not prosecute any more cases where Heatherly is relied on as a witness, and added the ammunition and suspected drugs that were seized in connection to the investigation involving the AR-15 have not been found.

Ammo and drugs are also missing.

No word on when Detective Heatherly left the police department, but the Illinois State's Attorney's office claims Detective Heatherly basically helped himself to the AR-15:

- He kept this rifle in the trunk of his squad car in a case he had purchased for it.

- He attached his own sling to this assault rifle.

- While on duty he posed for a picture while holding this rifle, and the picture was used in a department calendar.

Furthermore, St. Clair County State’s Attorney Brendan Kelly had this to say:

“While it appears, from the evidence available to my office at this time, Mr. Heatherly had no criminal or malicious intent, I am struck by the fact that he is a veteran police officer who knew or should have known that his actions breached the integrity of the evidence in a criminal case. Mr. Heatherly’s choice to remove a rifle from evidence on a pending case constitutes a flagrant violation of fundamental police protocol and thus creates an irreparable credibility deficit,” Kelly wrote.

You can read the full text of the letter at the Riverfront Times and see a video report from KMOV-TV in St. Louis.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 05:49 pm
@izzythepush,
I don't know either. Its hard to believe that moderators will suspend people for a four letter word but allow arrested perverts make apology posts defending child porn.

Funny, huh? These perverts believe in the freedom to read child porn but not in a child's right to not be prostituted. And to claim there's no money in this or that it doesn't hurt kids is outrageous.
0 Replies
 
hawkeye10
 
  -1  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 06:01 pm
@izzythepush,
izzythepush wrote:

Pretty much. He views watching child pornography as a victimless crime. he is correct His argument being that the crime has already happened and that nobody makes any money out of it he is correct 99+% of the time, it is traded not sold. He takes great pains to describe viewers of child pornography as viewers of child pornography and not paedophiles. Depends on what definition of paedophile one is using, if you believe that only acts that harm others and not fantasies should be medically or legally not allowed by the collective then fantasys about having sex with children should be a individual right. And he had to return one of his pornographic videos to the retailer because he feared the model was underage. Sounds like a good citizen right there

If that's not being an apologist for child pornography I don't know what is.


Apologist has gone the way of bigot, rapist, sexist, Misogynist, racist and so on....words that are now mostly empty after years of overuse and abuse.
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sun 29 Mar, 2015 06:02 pm
0 Replies
 
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