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Video Shows Native Hawaiian Man Severely Beaten by Cop for Praying Next to a Seal

 
 
Reply Thu 7 Jan, 2016 08:55 pm

Video Shows Native Hawaiian Man Severely Beaten by Cop for Praying Next to a Seal
Jamie Kalani Rice Rice was not trying to harm the seal, and resorting to the police was uncalled for.
By Justin Gardner / The Free Thought Project
January 6, 2016



Jamie Kalani Rice, a native Hawaiian, has filed a federal complaint against Honolulu police for an unprovoked beating he received from Officer Ming Wang, which was captured on videotape.
Photo Credit: screengrab/Star Advertiser

Honolulu, HI – Jamie Kalani Rice, a native Hawaiian, has filed a federal complaint against Honolulu police for an unprovoked beating he received from Officer Ming Wang, which was captured on videotape.
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Rice saw an endangered monk seal lying on the beach and believed it was sick, so he approached the seal and sat a few feet away from it. Rice chanted at the seal while rubbing sand on his body and throwing it in the air, attempting to use his mana (energy) for healing.

Volunteers with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recorded the encounter after asking Rice not to approach the seal. They had posted signs saying “Hawaiian Monk Seals: Please do not Disturb.”

The cameraman says, “Call the police” as he films. However, Rice was clearly not trying to harm the seal, and resorting to the police was uncalled for.

After a few minutes, Officer Wang shows up and approaches Rice, gesturing for him to leave the seal. Rice appears to be caught up in his ceremony, which seems to aggravate Wang as he menacingly whips out his baton.

The seal wiggles away from the pair, and Rice, seemingly satisfied at his deed, walks away. The cop wasn’t satisfied, though, following Rice and making demands.

Rice appears full of positivity as he picks up his belongings, perhaps believing that his ceremony helped the seal. He poses absolutely no threat to the officer, but Wang decides to attack Rice anyway.

Wang runs from behind Rice and pepper sprays him in the face, and then strikes Rice’s hand repeatedly at full force with his baton. Rice stands there without flinching, calmly taking the beating from this maniacal cop.

This lack of reaction infuriates Wang even further, as he pepper sprays Rice again and again. Then he strikes Rice’s other hand at full force with the baton, causing him to drop his bag. Wang continues striking Rice with the baton until Rice collapses in the sand. Wang gives him a final blow to the back and then stomps on the limp man’s body.

Rice suffered broken bones in his right hand from this beating. He rightly claims that Wang used excessive force, and the defendants “took steps to write reports that altered the events as they actually took place so as to justify Wang use force [sic] against the plaintiff to effectuate his arrest.” Wang deceptively attempted to charge Rice with resisting arrest too.

“Prosecutors initially declined to press charges against Wang, but chief prosecutor Keith Keneshiro disagreed and ordered his staff to re-examine the case, a spokesman for the prosecutor’s office said in a statement.”

Rice pleaded no contest to obstructing a government operation—a misdemeanor—and prosecutors declined to charge him with resisting arrest. He seeks punitive damages for negligence, civil rights violations, conspiracy, assault and battery, false imprisonment and emotional distress.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 2 • Views: 316 • Replies: 6
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cicerone imposter
 
  2  
Reply Thu 7 Jan, 2016 09:02 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Police violence has run amuck.
Robert Gentel
 
  2  
Reply Thu 7 Jan, 2016 09:15 pm
@cicerone imposter,
I suspect that police violence is actually trending downward, and the difference is that the proliferation of cell phone cameras has caused a tipping point in society where the level of police violence is no longer going to be tolerated.
cicerone imposter
 
  2  
Reply Thu 7 Jan, 2016 09:19 pm
@Robert Gentel,
You're right; the use of phone cameras just made society more exposed to police violence - and not necessarily that it has increased.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Thu 7 Jan, 2016 09:20 pm
I think its been getting worse the entire time that violent crime has dropped for the last 30 years. Cameras only make it undeniable.
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 7 Jan, 2016 09:22 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
You're right: https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=police+violence+increase+or+decrease&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Tue 19 Jan, 2016 11:56 pm

Graphic Body Cam Shows Cop Kill Unarmed Man, Who Posed No Threat, And Get Away With It

Witnesses also contradict the police narrative.
By Matt Agorist / The Free Thought Project
January 16, 2016



Jamie Kalani Rice, a native Hawaiian, has filed a federal complaint against Honolulu police for an unprovoked beating he received from Officer Ming Wang, which was captured on videotape.
Photo Credit: screengrab/Star Advertiser

Cameron Massey, 26, and Joshua Kelly, 30 were travelling through Eufaula, Alabama in October of 2013, when Massey’s life was taken by a cop in search of a plant that is legal in some form in 23 other states.

Officer John Phillips, acting on information from a confidential informant that their car contained marijuana, pulled over the vehicle driven by Kelly, on the contrived charges of improper lane change and obscured registration tags.

As Phillips began to deprive the two individuals of their freedom for being suspected of travelling with an illegal plant, the situation became tense.

As Phillips puts Kelly facedown on the ground in handcuffs, he calls for backup and then proceeds to the passenger side of the vehicle to handcuff Massey.

Understandably wanting to prevent himself from being locked in a cage for carrying a plant, Massey thought about how he could get out of the situation. So, he leaned over to the driver’s side of the car, threw the car into drive, and pressed the gas with his hand in an attempt to flee his captor.

It is clear from the video that Massey was not in any way attempting to cause harm to Phillips. However, Phillips and his backup officer, Eufaula Police Chief Ralph Conner, who arrived on scene just before Massey attempted to flee, would go on to claim otherwise — and people would believe them — until now.

As the car slowly began to roll forward, instead of stepping back and allowing him to drive off, Conner made the decision to escalate to deadly force and fired a single shot.

“Everything was so quick, so instantaneous,” Phillips told investigators. “At that time, I didn’t know if [Massey] had shot and he’s trying to stay down to keep from us returning fire.”

Instead of realizing that it was his backup who fired, Phillips let loose a volley of four more rounds into the 6’8″ 300 lb body of Cameron Massey. The car then slowly rolled to a stop into several parked cars. Massey was dead.

Quickly attempting to make the claim that his life was in danger, Phillips went on to tell investigators that, “When the car started to move, it was such a jolt, I thought the back tires was gonna get my leg and snatch me under the vehicle.”

Apparently, according to Phillips, tires can “snatch” the legs of cops and magically pull them under a vehicle as it slowly accelerates away. Ridiculously enough, Phillips is not alone in this claim.

Seneca Police Lt. Mark Tiller made the same assertion when he shot and killed 19-year-old Zachary Hammond over the possession of a small amount of marijuana. Officer Ray Tensing was caught on video killing Sam Dubose in a similar fashion. In September, cellphone footage was released showing police murdering 33-year-old John Barry, a mentally ill man who attempted to flee from police during a breakdown. One of the most disgusting examples of cops claiming to fear for their lives as cars drive off is the case of Officers Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse, Jr., who, in November, opened fire on a car occupied by 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis, killing him and severely injuring his father.

Phillips, like all of the aforementioned officers, claimed to be in imminent danger and falling, and instead of simply stepping backwards, insisted he was unable to do so, and was forced to kill a man.

Unfortunately for Phillips and Conner, there was a witness, Garrick Hall, who stated in a court declaration that, “Phillips had control of his body the entire time as the car was moving forward. At no time did I see Officer John Phillips fall to the ground or appear as if he was falling to the ground.”


This was officer Phillips first killing as, at the time of the shooting, he had only been on the force for two years. However, Conner is no stranger to killing unarmed black men.

According to Buzzfeed,

Conner, who was hired as Eufaula’s chief in early 2013, had shot an unarmed black man three decades before, when he was an investigator with the Montgomery Police Department. In 1983, Conner shot 22-year-old Bobby Joe Sales in the back after Sales fled from an attempted police stop, the Associated Press reported at the time.

Shooting an unarmed man in the back was not enough to get this cop charged, nor was it enough to even end his career as a cop, and 30 years later, he would shoot another unarmed black man who posed no threat.

After being denied justice through the state’s channels, Massey’s family filed a civil suit against the individual officers and the department in July 2015. The suit is still ongoing.

Phillips hasn’t received so much as a slap on the wrist, and Conner was allowed to retire with his full pension in September.

In the Land of the Free, cops can legally kidnap people for possessing a plant, and when the individual resists their kidnapping and the cop kills them, the individual is referred to as the criminal — and they call this justice.

Matt Agorist is a USMC veteran and former NSA intelligence operator. He has been an independent journalist for over a decade and has been featured on mainstream networks around the world.
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