40
   

The Day Ferguson Cops Were Caught in a Bloody Lie

 
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Sat 24 Oct, 2015 06:44 am
@BillRM,
TonyRM, I'd like to go back to the days when paranoid whackoids like you would have been institutionalized and severely medicated. You'd like that. Cigarettes and pajamas around a table with your little friends playing 500 gin with a deck of 51 cards and two five of clubs. You'd fit right in.

ONE cop gets shot by someone who should have been denied his second amendment rights and you get all eight year old girlish. HUNDREDS of innocent, unarmed, complying citizens get murdered by cops and you act like nothings wrong.

You do know the first sign of mental illness is an inability to consider things in proportion, right?

The second is denial.
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Oct, 2015 06:55 am
@bobsal u1553115,
bobsal u1553115 wrote:
You do know the first sign of mental illness is an inability to consider things in proportion, right?


This thread is a case in point.

http://able2know.org/topic/297820-1
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Sat 24 Oct, 2015 06:55 am
Foot fetish traffic stop lands school police officer in jail


[imghttp://ww4.hdnux.com/photos/32/73/32/7059091/4/460x1240.jpg][/img]

Dylan Baddour, Houston Chronicle Updated 3:24 pm, Friday, October 23, 2015


Cy-Fair Independent School District police officer Patrick Quinn was arrested and charged with 2 counts of official oppression. The charges were filed after the peace officer allegedly asked for sexual favors in exchange for not taking the victim to jail. Quinn is currently out on bond.

Cy-Fair Independent School District police officer Patrick Quinn was arrested and charged with 2 counts of official oppression. The charges were filed after the peace officer allegedly asked for sexual favors in exchange for not taking the victim to jail. Quinn is currently out on bond.

HOUSTON – A former Cypress-Fairbanks ISD police officer was sentenced Wednesday to one year in Harris County Jail after he pleaded guilty to offering to forego a woman's arrest if she let him lick her feet and have her underwear.

Patrick Quinn, 27, was charged in October 2014 with official oppression after the victim filed a complaint. In it, she alleged that Quinn stopped her in August 2014, as she drove on Jones Road in Northwest Harris County, first alleging her insurance was expired, then saying he smelled marijuana.


He conducted a search and found a marijuana grinder, which the woman denied owning.

Quinn then asked the complainant what she would do if he was in his position. She told him she would let him go. Instead, the officer told the woman he had a foot fetish and would let her go if she let him smell her feet, the DA's office said.

As the woman began to take off her boots and socks, Quinn told her that if he smelled her feet he would probably lick them, and that if she wanted another option he would let her go if she gave him her underwear, according to the complaint.

In the Digital Age, camera'armed citizens can draw national attention to encounters with local law enforcement. Click through our slideshow to see 24 police videos that went viral. Photo: Houston Chronicle Composite

Photo: Houston Chronicle Composite
Image 1 of 26
In the Digital Age, camera'armed citizens can draw national attention to encounters with local law enforcement.

Click through our slideshow to see 24 police videos that went viral.

The woman stated that she was wearing athletic shorts under her skirt, which she took off and attempted to hand Quinn. But as she did so, the officer allegedly told her never mind and let her go.

After the woman filed a complaint, authorities say they were able to pull the officer's fingerprints from the woman's insurance card.
BillRM
 
  0  
Reply Sat 24 Oct, 2015 06:57 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Try selling that to cops that was under gun fires by rioters due to the false reports repeat the false reports that Mr. Brown had his hands up instead of attacking officer Wilson.
0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  0  
Reply Sat 24 Oct, 2015 07:08 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
The charges were filed after the peace officer allegedly asked for sexual favors in exchange for not taking the victim to jail. Quinn is currently out on bond.


Would not wish to be a police officers with women bringing false charges again them.

[youtube]https://youtu.be/vCidpHYLmtE?t=62 [/youtube]
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Sat 24 Oct, 2015 07:50 pm
Florida Deputy Shoots Unarmed Man In Face While Serving Pot Warrant

The Huffington Post | By Andy Campbell

Posted: 03/05/2015 2:57 am EST Updated: 03/05/2015 2:59 am EST


A Volusia County Sheriff's deputy shot an unarmed man in the face while serving a drug warrant on Wednesday.

Deputies say Derek Cruice, 26, resisted arrest during the incident at his Deltona, Florida home. Cruice's friends, six of whom were at the house when a SWAT team entered, called the fatal shooting "murder."

At 6:32 a.m., Deputy Todd Raible, 36, fired one shot, hitting Cruice in the face as he stood inside the doorway, police told WFTV.

Cruice was pronounced dead a short time later at an area hospital.

"They were met with resistance and a shooting incurred," Volusia County Sheriff Ben Johnson told My News 13.

The sheriff's department confirmed that Cruice was unarmed at the time.

Deputy involved in shooting while serving warrant in Deltona. Suspect shot once in face after advancing on deputy. No injury to deputies.

— Volusia Co. Sheriff (@VolusiaSheriff) March 4, 2015

One of the men inside the home, 24-year-old Matthew Grady, contradicted deputies' claims that Cruice had resisted arrest.

"There's a couple of seconds between opening the door, walking out, getting to my knee and halfway out there's gunfire," Grady told My News 13. "I look back as the guy's grabbing me, and my friend is dead or dying."

When asked if Cruice resisted, Grady said: "No."

Roommate Steven Cochran said Cruice wasn't wearing a shirt at the time of the shooting, and didn't pose a threat of carrying a concealed weapon.

"It's kind of hard to conceal anything or hide anything when this is all you have on," said Cochran. "They entered the house and fired."

Raible, a SWAT team member and narcotics investigator with the department for 10 years, reportedly has a clean record. He was placed on administrative leave, and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement has taken over the investigation. Raible wasn't injured in the incident, according to the sheriff's department.

The sheriff's office allegedly recovered 217 grams of marijuana at the home, along with a scale, pipes, plastic bags and about $3,000 in cash.

Cruice had previously been arrested on misdemeanor drug charges in the past, but was never convicted, WFTV reported.

Related on HuffPost:
0 Replies
 
ossobuco
 
  2  
Reply Sun 25 Oct, 2015 11:17 am
@McGentrix,
Thanks for the info, the cloud sounds like a good thing in these kind of circumstances.

0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 27 Oct, 2015 09:27 pm

I hear on the news today that these "Black Lives Matter" goons are now trying to prevent police from enforcing order when minority troublemakers take over classrooms and prevent teachers from teaching.

It'll be a good idea to put your kids in a private school if at all possible. It won't be long now before the public schools are all completely controlled by gangs.
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Tue 27 Oct, 2015 09:34 pm
@oralloy,
Quote:
"They sky is falling! Henny Penny said the sky is falling down!!!!"


Sure it is, Sparky.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Tue 27 Oct, 2015 09:48 pm
2 Detroit cops accused of stealing from people they stopped

By COREY WILLIAMS
Oct. 27, 2015 4:30 PM EDT


Detroit Police-Officers Charged

in this image taken from video provided by the 36th District Court, Detroit police officers Charles... Read more

DETROIT (AP) — Two members of an elite Detroit police unit are accused of stealing money from people they stopped on the street and with fabricating information about an arrest.

Officers Charles Lynem, 28, and Chancellor Searcy, 31, were arraigned Tuesday on embezzlement, larceny, misconduct and falsely reporting a felony charges. Searcy also is charged with failing to uphold the law.

"Whenever an officer is accused of criminal misconduct, certainly it's a dark day for the department," Police Chief James Craig told reporters. "These allegations should not be a reflection of every Detroit police officer."

Lynem and Searcy are seven-year veterans of the department and were partners in Detroit's Tactical Response Unit, which targets crime hotspots across the city. Their arrests followed a yearlong investigation.

They're accused of taking money from three people, starting with a 33-year-old man who was arrested in March 2013 at a gas station. A "sum of money" was confiscated from him, according to the Wayne County prosecutor's office.

"There was wrongful conduct surrounding the detention, frisk, seizure of property and the arrest of the suspect," prosecutors said in a release.

In another instance, a 28-year-old man filed a complaint Aug. 4, 2014, at a police precinct after money was taken from him on the city's west side. Six days later, money was taken from another man's pocket during a pat down. That man also filed a complaint.

Prosecutors also allege that circumstances around a Sept. 27, 2014, arrest of a 41-year-old man on the west side for carrying a concealed weapon were "fabricated."

Searcy and Lynem were suspended with pay about a year ago. They were suspended without pay following Tuesday's charges.

"It tarnishes the badge," Craig said of the allegations. "Our men and women who wear the uniform work extremely hard and the vast majority just go out and serve this community with distinction and with honor.

"When someone from the family decides to go in a different direction it's troubling for many of our members."

Searcy and Lynem turned themselves in for arrest Tuesday morning. They were released on personal bond pending Nov. 3 probable cause hearings. Preliminary examinations were scheduled for Nov. 10.

No attorneys were listed in court documents for either officer.

The Associated Press left a message seeking comment from the police union.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Wed 28 Oct, 2015 07:12 am
http://assets.amuniversal.com/fdaf62f05f760133144d005056a9545d.jpg
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Wed 28 Oct, 2015 01:00 pm
South Carolina Deputy Fired Over Student Confrontation.
Source: nyt

A South Carolina sheriff said Wednesday that he had fired a white deputy who was caught on video grabbing an African-American student, flipping her backward as she sat at her desk, then dragging and throwing her across the floor as he tried to remove her from the classroom.

The Richland County deputy, Ben Fields, was dismissed after an internal investigation concluded that he had violated department standards, said the sheriff, Leon Lott. Deputy Fields, who had been assigned to Spring Valley High School, is also a subject of a federal civil rights inquiry that could lead to criminal charges.

“Deputy Fields did not follow proper training, did not follow proper procedure, when he threw the student across the room,” Sheriff Lott said at a news conference in Columbia.

Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/29/us/south-carolina-deputy-ben-fields-fired.html?
BillRM
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 28 Oct, 2015 09:52 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Nothing like having out of control classrooms where a student know he or she can tell the teacher, then the principle and then the cop to go to hell when told to turn over a cell phone and or leave the classroom.

Oh I forgot you can also punch the cop if he try to force you out of the classroom.

My things had change as a student in the 60s I never saw one time that a fellow student had told a teacher to go to hell let alone others adults in power including a cop.

One wonder with such a license now being granted to misbehaving students how must education will be done in American classrooms.

revelette2
 
  3  
Reply Thu 29 Oct, 2015 05:56 am
@bobsal u1553115,
I first saw this on a liberal website, I am glad he got fired. I mean that was just crazy. It started because she was texting and refused to leave the room. It is entirely possible she simply didn't hear the officer. I mean have you tried to talking kids when their on their phones which is all the time? However, Sherriff Lott is right, he surely didn't follow proper procedure. Did they have cameras in the room or did a student film it on their phone?
revelette2
 
  1  
Reply Thu 29 Oct, 2015 06:02 am
@BillRM,
Come on BillRM, surely you can't condone the teacher flipping her chair and throwing her across the room. Have you seen the video?



bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Thu 29 Oct, 2015 06:56 am
@BillRM,
So, TonyRM, why did the cop take it out of control?

1. He should have cleared the class room.
2. He should have given her space to compose herself.
3. He should have had a staff member like a guidance councilor talking quietly with her.
4. He should have cleared the deskchairs around her.
5. He should have gotten back up.

He was out of control, didn't you even watch the video? What exact civil/criminal law was she breaking? Why was he even there to begin with?

This is the result of his assault on her:


<snip>

An influential South Carolina Democrat plans to represent a teenage girl thrown to the ground by a school resource officer — and he intends to change a state law that allows police to arrest students for being disruptive in class.

Richland County Deputy Ben Fields was fired Wednesday for violating agency policy when he picked up the 16-year-old girl and threw her across a classroom during the arrest at Spring Valley High School.

State Rep. Todd Rutherford (D-Columbia) told WLTX-TV the 16-year-old girl suffered arm, neck and back injuries when Fields grabbed her by the throat and threw her to the ground after the teen refused to hand over her cell phone to a teacher.

“He weighs about 300 pounds,” Rutherford said. “She is a student who is 16 years old, who now has a cast on her arm, a band aid on her neck, and neck and back problems. There’s something wrong here.”

Rutherford told the New York Daily News that the teen recently lost her mother and is living in a foster home. The teen’s foster mother said the girl was “devastated and emotionally traumatized by all that has happened to her,” according to the Daily News.

Rutherford said that lawmakers must tighten up restrictions on use of force by school resources officers such as Fields — who students say was “known for slamming” pregnant women and teenage girls to the ground.

“The legislature needs to take action, and make sure our students are not the targets of rogue police officers called ‘Officer Slam’ who are going to walk in and brutalize them at a moment’s notice,” Rutherford said

<snip>

More: http://www.rawstory.com/2015/10/black-teen-attacked-by-south-carolina-cop-has-a-cast-on-her-arm-and-neck-and-back-injuries/

Just in case you don't "get it":

bobsal u1553115
 
  4  
Reply Thu 29 Oct, 2015 06:59 am
@revelette2,
It was totally out of control. The cop took it to criminal. I understand the cell phone policy - my teaching daughter had to confiscate cellphones regularly and a lot of parents don't cell phones confiscated. But its not a criminal problem and the cop was not required.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Thu 29 Oct, 2015 07:02 am
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Thu 29 Oct, 2015 07:04 am
0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 29 Oct, 2015 07:56 am
@revelette2,
Quote:
It is entirely possible she simply didn't hear the officer


What bullshit she did not hear first the teacher then the principal and then the cop!!!!!!!!
 

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