F*CK THE POLICE!!!

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Cop Charged With Murder and Manslaughter in 2 Separate Fatal Shootings Gets His Job Back
By Andrew Emett

Waverly, OH -- Indicted on five counts, including felony murder and reckless homicide, Pike County Deputy Joel Jenkins was officially reinstated on Tuesday after the sheriff recently fired him for shooting his neighbor to death while drunk. Although the police union fought to reinstate the negligent deputy, the sheriff refuses to place him back on duty or issue him another paycheck.
At 11:40 p.m. on December 3, Deputy Jenkins called the non-emergency line at the sheriff's office to report his neighbor, Jason Brady, 40, had been accidentally shot. Officers arrived to find Brady deceased with a bullet wound to the head. Clearly inebriated, Jenkins admitted to killing his neighbor while showing off a gun that he possibly received from Pike County Prosecutor Rob Junk.

Charged with involuntary manslaughter, Jenkins was arrested the next day and fired later that weekend. On December 10, a special grand jury indicted Jenkins for reckless homicide, involuntary manslaughter, and tampering with evidence in the case of his neighbor's death. According to neighbors, Brady used to feed and walk Jenkins' police dog.

Jenkins was also charged with felony murder and reckless homicide for the March 28 death of Robert Rooker, 26. Officers began pursuing Rooker for driving 52-mph in a 45-mph zone. After crashing his vehicle, Rooker died after Jenkins reportedly shot him to death. Placed on paid administrative leave for his involvement in Rooker's death, Jenkins was drunk and off-duty when he admittedly killed Brady a few months later.

Even though Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader fired Jenkins earlier this month, the police union representing the disgraced deputy fought to have Jenkins reinstated during a pre-disciplinary hearing on Tuesday. According to Catherine Brockman, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, Ohio Labor Council Inc., Sheriff Reader violated the union contract when he fired Jenkins without due process.

Although Reader declared he has no intention of ever paying Jenkins again, Pike County Labor Consultant Bob Cross stated, "We may owe the gentleman a few days pay."

Determined to fire Jenkins again, Reader believes the union is merely attempting to preserve some pay for the fallen deputy. But Reader announced, "He will never work in this department again."

Before joining the Pike County Sheriff's Office in 2012, Jenkins had briefly been a deputy in Fayette County. According to Fayette County Sheriff Vernon Stanforth, Jenkins had been reprimanded for driving his cruiser into an elderly man at a crosswalk.
---------------------
I see alcohol involved with all of this....
 

D528

Well-Known Member
Published on Dec 24, 2015
A video showing a San Diego police officer gunning down a homeless man suspected of carrying a knife last April – which turned out to be a pen – was released this week, showing Fridoon Rawshan Nehad did not charge at the officer when he was shot as initially reported.

And further evidence released today shows that San Diego police officer Neal Browder told fellow officers hours after the shooting that he did not see a weapon.

But then days later – after he was allowed to watch the video – he changed his story to say, “He was going to stab me. There’s no doubt in my mind that he was going to stab me."
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Published on Dec 24, 2015
A video showing a San Diego police officer gunning down a homeless man suspected of carrying a knife last April – which turned out to be a pen – was released this week, showing Fridoon Rawshan Nehad did not charge at the officer when he was shot as initially reported.

And further evidence released today shows that San Diego police officer Neal Browder told fellow officers hours after the shooting that he did not see a weapon.

But then days later – after he was allowed to watch the video – he changed his story to say, “He was going to stab me. There’s no doubt in my mind that he was going to stab me."
Dude was 10' away, WALKING, showing no signs of violent behavior..

Body cams will be the death of the private prison industry

Clearly murder, caught on tape, and because the guy wears blue and carries a badge, he'll likely get away with it..


Fuck the police.
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Clearly murder, caught on tape, and because the guy wears blue and carries a badge, he'll likely get away with it..
Correction, got away with it..

http://www.voiceofsandiego.org/topics/public-safety/whats-still-in-dispute-after-the-das-decision-not-to-prosecute-police-shooting/?utm_source=Voice+of+San+Diego+Master+List&utm_campaign=cb0bf0074a-Fridoon+blast&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c2357fd0a3-cb0bf0074a-81855537

"Browder said Nehad was threatening him with a knife that later turned out to be a metallic pen. Dumanis said the evidence clearly supports the officer’s perspective."

Even if the guy was carrying a knife, he wasn't acting or advancing in a threatening manner and he was 10-15' away from the officer in question..


I have a friend who opened the door with a knife in his hand because he was cutting vegetables and the cop who knocked shot him dead - and it was fuckin' justified...

This is the world we live in.. Cops can do anything they want to anyone, anytime, so long as they have a somewhat credible excuse that 1 out of 5 people buys. There are zero avenues for the public to oppose the police except for bullshit "police complaints" the chief uses to congratulate the fucks that issue them.
 

D528

Well-Known Member


"Come Get Ur Bite" Text Messages Sent to K-9 Cop That Mauled Unarmed Teen

by Asa Jay

Text messages have emerged from the North Port Police Department in Florida showing a disturbing and morbid conversation between K-9 unit officers before one of the cops allowed his animal to maul an unarmed and reportedly troubled teen.

The messages, which were sent via the officers’ police cruiser mobile digital terminals, were obtained by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune as part of an 18-month investigation into the unit.

Following years of lawsuits and controversy, it was reported in July that the unit commanded their dogs to attack 34 people from 2010 to 2014 – that’s more than the K-9 units from the five neighboring municipalities combined.

Additionally, 37 percent of the apprehensions made during that period ended with an attack – a number that is higher than the traditional 30 percent threshold that many departments use as an indicator of performance and misconduct.

On July 16, 2012, the mother of 18-year-old Jared Lemay called the department to express concerns that her son may be suicidal after she reportedly found a noose hanging in her garage. Lemay was wanted for a probation violation and later said that he was depressed and considered killing himself.

K-9 unit commander Keith Bush, who has a history of numerous questionable incidents involving dog attacks of juveniles and unarmed suspects, was dispatched to the scene. Police records show that on his way, Bush sent a text message to handler Michael Dietz telling the officer to, “COME GET UR BITE.”

An additional message sent by Bush would later say, “IM GONNA TAKE UR BITE IF U DONT HURRY UP.”

Unarmed and hiding in a trash can, Lemay was found by Dietz and bitten in the face and back by the officer’s Belgian Malinois. Police photographs taken from the scene show deep puncture wounds to the young mans blood covered cheeks.

“I couldn’t even eat for a week after that because my face was so swollen,” Lemay said. “I heard a knock on the door, and I ran into the garage and jumped in the trash can. I decided to hide. That was just my instinct at the moment.”

Officer Bush wrote in reports that he pushed over the trash can after Lemay refused to follow commands to show his hands, but the teen asserts that after one officer opened the can’s lid and found him inside, he closed it and immediately pushed it over.

“I remember hitting the ground on my hands to brace myself from falling, and I looked up at them, and I went to say ‘OK, OK,’ and the guy sicced the dog on me as soon as I started to talk,” Lemay said. “I remember [the dog’s] mouth coming toward me and latching onto my face. He literally drug me out of the trash can. After the dog bit me a second time, one of the police officers put his knee in the back of my head and handcuffed me.”

Police records show that after the attack, Bush sent Dietz a text message saying, “CONGRATS,” and later discussed what occurred with officer Brandon McHale:
“YOUR BITE OR [Dietz’s]?” McHale inquired.

“I LET [Dietz] HAVE IT,” Bush replied.

“NICE, HOW BAD?” McHale asked.

“BAD,” Bush wrote. “FACE AND BACK.”

“SKIN GRAFT BAD?” McHale asked.

“NO,” Bush wrote.

“COULDA BEEN WORSE THEN, HE SHOULD HAVE COMPLIED,” McHale said, ending the conversation.
The department has refused to comment on the messages citing pending litigation in the case, but supervisors approved Dietz’s use of force following the incident. On July 21, 2014, Bush received a “memorandum of counseling,” which called the messages “unprofessional” and a violation of department policy surrounding mobile digital terminals.

A memorandum of counseling is the least severe form of discipline a North Port officer can receive, and is lower than even a written reprimand.

“E-mails and Messages sent via the [mobile digital terminal] are public record, and employees will be held accountable for the content of the messages,” the memorandum said. “This memorandum of counseling shall be characterized as a corrective rather than punitive action. Further violations will result in progressive discipline.”

The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida says the messages should have elicited a much stronger response by the department. They say the texts show clear evidence of a premeditated attack by police on Lemay.

“The ACLU considers this event to be a clear case of excessive use of force and improper use of police dogs,” legal chair Andrea Mogensen said. “It’s tantamount to a planned use of force. If you’re on the way to the scene and your information is that the subject is depressed and suicidal with no history of violence it’s really not reasonable to plan a use of force on the way there.”

Two other civil rights violation lawsuits involving North Port’s K-9 unit are currently making its way through the federal court system. Both involve Officer Bush and his dog, which has accumulated 25 bites since the start of 2012.
 

D528

Well-Known Member
How are these adolescent punk terrorist .
"Come Get Ur Bite" Text Messages Sent to K-9 Cop That Mauled Unarmed Teen
by Asa Jay

Text messages have emerged from the North Port Police Department in Florida showing a disturbing and morbid conversation between K-9 unit officers before one of the cops allowed his animal to maul an unarmed and reportedly troubled teen.

The messages, which were sent via the officers’ police cruiser mobile digital terminals, were obtained by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune as part of an 18-month investigation into the unit.

Following years of lawsuits and controversy, it was reported in July that the unit commanded their dogs to attack 34 people from 2010 to 2014 – that’s more than the K-9 units from the five neighboring municipalities combined.

Additionally, 37 percent of the apprehensions made during that period ended with an attack – a number that is higher than the traditional 30 percent threshold that many departments use as an indicator of performance and misconduct.

On July 16, 2012, the mother of 18-year-old Jared Lemay called the department to express concerns that her son may be suicidal after she reportedly found a noose hanging in her garage. Lemay was wanted for a probation violation and later said that he was depressed and considered killing himself.

K-9 unit commander Keith Bush, who has a history of numerous questionable incidents involving dog attacks of juveniles and unarmed suspects, was dispatched to the scene. Police records show that on his way, Bush sent a text message to handler Michael Dietz telling the officer to, “COME GET UR BITE.”

An additional message sent by Bush would later say, “IM GONNA TAKE UR BITE IF U DONT HURRY UP.”

Unarmed and hiding in a trash can, Lemay was found by Dietz and bitten in the face and back by the officer’s Belgian Malinois. Police photographs taken from the scene show deep puncture wounds to the young mans blood covered cheeks.

“I couldn’t even eat for a week after that because my face was so swollen,” Lemay said. “I heard a knock on the door, and I ran into the garage and jumped in the trash can. I decided to hide. That was just my instinct at the moment.”

Officer Bush wrote in reports that he pushed over the trash can after Lemay refused to follow commands to show his hands, but the teen asserts that after one officer opened the can’s lid and found him inside, he closed it and immediately pushed it over.

“I remember hitting the ground on my hands to brace myself from falling, and I looked up at them, and I went to say ‘OK, OK,’ and the guy sicced the dog on me as soon as I started to talk,” Lemay said. “I remember [the dog’s] mouth coming toward me and latching onto my face. He literally drug me out of the trash can. After the dog bit me a second time, one of the police officers put his knee in the back of my head and handcuffed me.”

Police records show that after the attack, Bush sent Dietz a text message saying, “CONGRATS,” and later discussed what occurred with officer Brandon McHale:
“YOUR BITE OR [Dietz’s]?” McHale inquired.

“I LET [Dietz] HAVE IT,” Bush replied.

“NICE, HOW BAD?” McHale asked.

“BAD,” Bush wrote. “FACE AND BACK.”

“SKIN GRAFT BAD?” McHale asked.

“NO,” Bush wrote.

“COULDA BEEN WORSE THEN, HE SHOULD HAVE COMPLIED,” McHale said, ending the conversation.
The department has refused to comment on the messages citing pending litigation in the case, but supervisors approved Dietz’s use of force following the incident. On July 21, 2014, Bush received a “memorandum of counseling,” which called the messages “unprofessional” and a violation of department policy surrounding mobile digital terminals.

A memorandum of counseling is the least severe form of discipline a North Port officer can receive, and is lower than even a written reprimand.

“E-mails and Messages sent via the [mobile digital terminal] are public record, and employees will be held accountable for the content of the messages,” the memorandum said. “This memorandum of counseling shall be characterized as a corrective rather than punitive action. Further violations will result in progressive discipline.”

The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida says the messages should have elicited a much stronger response by the department. They say the texts show clear evidence of a premeditated attack by police on Lemay.

“The ACLU considers this event to be a clear case of excessive use of force and improper use of police dogs,” legal chair Andrea Mogensen said. “It’s tantamount to a planned use of force. If you’re on the way to the scene and your information is that the subject is depressed and suicidal with no history of violence it’s really not reasonable to plan a use of force on the way there.”

Two other civil rights violation lawsuits involving North Port’s K-9 unit are currently making its way through the federal court system. Both involve Officer Bush and his dog, which has accumulated 25 bites since the start of 2012.
 

D528

Well-Known Member
adolescent punks !
"Come Get Ur Bite" Text Messages Sent to K-9 Cop That Mauled Unarmed Teen

by Asa Jay

Text messages have emerged from the North Port Police Department in Florida showing a disturbing and morbid conversation between K-9 unit officers before one of the cops allowed his animal to maul an unarmed and reportedly troubled teen.

The messages, which were sent via the officers’ police cruiser mobile digital terminals, were obtained by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune as part of an 18-month investigation into the unit.

Following years of lawsuits and controversy, it was reported in July that the unit commanded their dogs to attack 34 people from 2010 to 2014 – that’s more than the K-9 units from the five neighboring municipalities combined.

Additionally, 37 percent of the apprehensions made during that period ended with an attack – a number that is higher than the traditional 30 percent threshold that many departments use as an indicator of performance and misconduct.

On July 16, 2012, the mother of 18-year-old Jared Lemay called the department to express concerns that her son may be suicidal after she reportedly found a noose hanging in her garage. Lemay was wanted for a probation violation and later said that he was depressed and considered killing himself.

K-9 unit commander Keith Bush, who has a history of numerous questionable incidents involving dog attacks of juveniles and unarmed suspects, was dispatched to the scene. Police records show that on his way, Bush sent a text message to handler Michael Dietz telling the officer to, “COME GET UR BITE.”

An additional message sent by Bush would later say, “IM GONNA TAKE UR BITE IF U DONT HURRY UP.”

Unarmed and hiding in a trash can, Lemay was found by Dietz and bitten in the face and back by the officer’s Belgian Malinois. Police photographs taken from the scene show deep puncture wounds to the young mans blood covered cheeks.

“I couldn’t even eat for a week after that because my face was so swollen,” Lemay said. “I heard a knock on the door, and I ran into the garage and jumped in the trash can. I decided to hide. That was just my instinct at the moment.”

Officer Bush wrote in reports that he pushed over the trash can after Lemay refused to follow commands to show his hands, but the teen asserts that after one officer opened the can’s lid and found him inside, he closed it and immediately pushed it over.

“I remember hitting the ground on my hands to brace myself from falling, and I looked up at them, and I went to say ‘OK, OK,’ and the guy sicced the dog on me as soon as I started to talk,” Lemay said. “I remember [the dog’s] mouth coming toward me and latching onto my face. He literally drug me out of the trash can. After the dog bit me a second time, one of the police officers put his knee in the back of my head and handcuffed me.”

Police records show that after the attack, Bush sent Dietz a text message saying, “CONGRATS,” and later discussed what occurred with officer Brandon McHale:
“YOUR BITE OR [Dietz’s]?” McHale inquired.

“I LET [Dietz] HAVE IT,” Bush replied.

“NICE, HOW BAD?” McHale asked.

“BAD,” Bush wrote. “FACE AND BACK.”

“SKIN GRAFT BAD?” McHale asked.

“NO,” Bush wrote.

“COULDA BEEN WORSE THEN, HE SHOULD HAVE COMPLIED,” McHale said, ending the conversation.
The department has refused to comment on the messages citing pending litigation in the case, but supervisors approved Dietz’s use of force following the incident. On July 21, 2014, Bush received a “memorandum of counseling,” which called the messages “unprofessional” and a violation of department policy surrounding mobile digital terminals.

A memorandum of counseling is the least severe form of discipline a North Port officer can receive, and is lower than even a written reprimand.

“E-mails and Messages sent via the [mobile digital terminal] are public record, and employees will be held accountable for the content of the messages,” the memorandum said. “This memorandum of counseling shall be characterized as a corrective rather than punitive action. Further violations will result in progressive discipline.”

The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida says the messages should have elicited a much stronger response by the department. They say the texts show clear evidence of a premeditated attack by police on Lemay.

“The ACLU considers this event to be a clear case of excessive use of force and improper use of police dogs,” legal chair Andrea Mogensen said. “It’s tantamount to a planned use of force. If you’re on the way to the scene and your information is that the subject is depressed and suicidal with no history of violence it’s really not reasonable to plan a use of force on the way there.”

Two other civil rights violation lawsuits involving North Port’s K-9 unit are currently making its way through the federal court system. Both involve Officer Bush and his dog, which has accumulated 25 bites since the start of 2012.
 

D528

Well-Known Member
FL Police Wired Drug Money to Known Drug Traffickers, Money Launderers

In a state seized by a dramatic surge in drug dealing, Bal Harbour police were about to take their controversial sting operation far outside Florida.

After weeks of delivering drug money to Miami storefront businesses, a new deal unfolded thousands of miles away in a country where the war on drugs had shifted: Venezuela.

Instead of enlisting the help of federal agents, the officers from the small community embarked on a series of laundering arrangements that were never revealed to the federal government.

For two years starting in 2010, they funneled millions in drug money into the bank accounts of Venezuelans, including William Amaro Sanchez, now special assistant to President Nicolás Maduro. The stated goal: to disrupt criminal groups.

They sent drug money to a well-known trafficker, a cash smuggler and a money launderer — more than $4 million in all.

Full Article »
 

D528

Well-Known Member
Horrifying Video Shows Cops Sic K-9 On Infant Daughter of a Man They Mistook For a Suspect
By Matt Agorist

Henderson, NV — On January 30, 2015, a health food store in Henderson called the police after a disgruntled customer, attempting to return some protein powder, allegedly threatened to rob them. The store described the suspect to police as a black male wearing a black and tan t-shirt who left in an SUV.

As police responded to the call, they quickly stopped the first person they saw, who happened to be Arturo Arenas-Alvarez. Arenas-Alvarez had just pulled up in the shopping center to do some shopping when police drew their weapons and demanded he put his hands in the air and step toward them.

Arenas-Alvarez did not appear to understand why multiple armed men were pointing their guns at him, so one officer asked him in Spanish to approach the vehicle.

Before Arenas-Alvarez makes it all the way to the vehicle, officers realized they had the wrong guy.

"That's not him, dude. That's not a black man in a black shirt," one officer said to another.

However, they continued the detainment.

Officers begin to assure Arenas-Alvarez that he will be fine. "They thought that you were involved in a robbery. You don't look like the person, so it's OK now, OK?" one officer said. However, nothing could have been further from the truth.

As officers were telling Arenas-Alvarez that he'll be okay, Sgt. James Mitchell can be heard on the radio telling the officers, "Stand by a couple of minutes. K9-1 is about two minutes out."

During the display of gross incompetence of mistaking Arenas-Alvarez for a black man in a black shirt, Arenas-Alvarez's 17-month-old daughter, Ayleen was strapped into her car seat in the SUV.

Before Arenas-Alvarez could communicate to the officers that his infant daughter was in the car, the "two minutes" had passed and Sgt. Mitchell arrived with his Belgian Malinois. Almost as soon as he exited the vehicle, Mithcell released the K-9 into the SUV of an entirely innocent man and his daughter.

"My baby," Arturo Arenas-Alvarez can be heard pleading with officers in broken English. "I've got my baby."

An officer then yelled out, "There's an infant in that car! There's an infant in that car!"

But it was too late. By the time the cops realized that their immediate escalation to violence was unnecessary – the damage had been done.

Ayleen's blood curdling and heart-wrenching screams of agony can be heard on the dashcam. The 4-year-old dog, Doerak, was ripping into the baby's flesh. By the time the dog let go of the infant, her right arm had been mauled. She was left with nine puncture wounds and abrasions.

After the incident was over, Mitchell can be heard blaming his fellow officers for releasing the dog.

"God damn, guys, you gotta f**king tell me!" he yelled. But Mitchell didn't give the other officers any time to tell him before letting loose the dog.

"The last forearm, the guy didn't have anything left but bone," Mitchell can be heard telling other officers in an apparent attempt to downplay the severity of what he just did.

On the dashcam one officer can be heard saying that their response to this incident of mistaking a man and his daughter for a completely different looking man was "solid" and it could've been much worse.

"All that happened was totally solid. Just a sh*tty set of circumstances that all rolled into -- what could've been much worse. So just get that whole timeline out there," the officer said.

After the incident, Mitchell and Doerak were taken off the street as a routine practice, similar to that of officer-involved shootings. However, since then, Doerak and Mitchell have been released back to regular duty.

For the purposeful mauling of their infant daughter, the city of Henderson agreed to pay the family a whopping $13,000 to settle their claim. But the family is unable to get the $8,537.69 (amount after legal fees) without a court order.

Below is the horrifying video of the incident which illustrates the sheer violent and unaccountable nature of police in the US.

WARNING: Video is disturbing. Viewer discretion is advised.
http://content.jwplatform.com/previews/65ciRBOR-Bw0sFO2g


I think a diet change is in order ! Maybe a t.v. change too. fucking guttless wonders ! Keystone cops for sure !



SHARE:
 

D528

Well-Known Member
Fuck the fbi coppers too ! , theres a reason people are suing them ,lol.
Immoral Patsy: How The FBI Groomed Mentally Disabled Teen With A 51 IQ Into An "ISIS Terrorist"
by William Norman Grigg

It isn't clear what use ISIS or the Pakistani Taliban would have for an 18-year-old American student with an estimated IQ of 51, is marginally verbal, and has little ability to perform routine tasks like tying his shoelaces. Peyton Pruitt, described by family and school officials as a developmentally stunted child, displays little understanding of terrorism and has no skills a terrorist group would covet.However, he is able to participate in online chats, which made him an irresistible target for FBI agents trolling the web in search of patsies to cast in Homeland Security Theater productions.

Although Pruitt is unable to use the bathroom without assistance, the FBI and the St. Clair, Alabama Sheriff's Office are pretending that he was part of a plot to provide "material assistance to terrorism" on the basis of online conversations with FBI agents posing as recruiters for ISIS and the Taliban. He remains incarcerated in the St. Clair County Jail on $1 million bond.

Following an evidentiary hearing on December 22, Judge Alan Furr refused to reduce the bond and referred the case to a grand jury. In what might be an indication of the case, the FBI, rather than seeking charges under a federal statute, is assisting the effort to prosecute Pruitt under an Alabama state anti-terrorism statute.

Anthony Pruitt, Peyton's father, told the judge that he had given his son a laptop computer for Christmas last year. The teenager had been part of a program for handicapped people at the E.H. Gentry Technical Center -- a school for deaf and blind children — until last May, when his father withdrew him. It was during his time at Gentry that Peyton was lured into compromising internet conversations with FBI agents. The father didn't know anything about that activity until his son's arrest in November.

If he had known that his son was being trolled by federal agents posing as terrorist recruiters, Anthony Pruitt testified, "I would have gone to the school, smashed his computer into a billion pieces and grounded him for life." Owing to the legal expenses involved in trying to protect his son, Pruitt explained, he has "lost everything – my home, my land, my job."

As a younger child, Peyton was diagnosed with "Mental Retardation, Intellectual Disability, Pervasive Developmental Disorder, and Attention Deficit Disorder." Educators have described him as an invalid who cannot distinguish between reality and fantasy.

During the probable cause hearing, prosecutors argued that Pruit was reading bomb-making instructions in al Qaeda's online magazine, Inspire, and communicating with people identified as overseas jihadis -- by way of a messaging service called Wickr — about potential sites for an attack. Prosecutors insist that they were shown a considerable amount of information during a meeting with the regional FBI director, but that supposed evidence was not presented during the pre-trial hearing.

During that hearing, defense attorney Gibson Holladay asked investigator Tommy Dixon: "All you've got is Peyton's statement [following his arrest], right? You couldn't tell me if Peyton contacted Santa Claus or a terrorist, can you? Was it a bomb or a recipe for banana pudding? You don't know, do you?"

In cross-examining defense witness Helen Waldrop, an employee at the Gentry Center, St. Clair County District Attorney Richard Minor insinuated, without directly claiming, that Peyton "could quote the Koran" and had accessed an encrypted website. Assuming those statements to be true, neither would constitutes actual evidence of a crime or criminal intent, and both could reflect efforts of FBI provocateurs to manipulate the suggestible young man into doing something that would fit the familiar Homeland Security Theater narrative.

The FBI employs a large number of agents who specialize in talent-scouting marginalized and emotionally troubled young men and -- using skills similar to other child predators -- luring them into pre-scripted "terrorism plots." In one such case, that of the "Newburgh Four" in New Jersey, the trial revealed the use of a Pakistani career criminal named Shahed Hussain, who was described, on the record, by a federal prosecutor as a "terrorism facilitator."

Craig Monteilh, a convict-turned-FBI "terrorism facilitator," has described that procedure in a civil rights lawsuit he filed against the agency. About a decade ago, Monteilh was approached by two FBI agents who explained that they acted "pursuant to a National Security Directive called OPERATION FLEX, which was signed by President Bush as executive order #12356." In exchange for assistance with his legal troubles, Montielh was recruited for the purpose of "organizing terrorist activities, making reference to `jihad' (Holy War) and organizing terrorist plots and activities."

His chief assignment was "to infiltrate and spy on the activities of the members of the [Irvine, California] Mosque in an effort to uncover potential terrorists and plots against the Government. He was instructed by his handlers to act in a manner that suggested that he was a terrorist.… His actions made many of the members of the Mosque uncomfortable and the Attorney for the Mosque ... contacted him in an effort to get him to stop attending regular prayers." (Emphasis added.)

Disturbed by Monteilh's efforts to promote violence and incite terrorism, several people who attended the mosque, working with CAIR, contacted the FBI. Rather than thanking them for their vigilance, the FBI targeted one of them -- an Afghan refugee named Amadullah Sais Niazi -- for retaliation, accusing him of lying about a distant relative in a naturalization application and threatening him with prison unless he, too, became an informant.

Nearly every "terrorist plot" supposedly foiled by the FBI since 2002 has followed this script, or some variation on it. When our supposed protectors go to such lengths to entrap and prosecute mentally retarded teenagers, it's difficult to believe we face an existential terrorist threat.
 

D528

Well-Known Member
thye should put this on "cops ". lol.

Entire Florida Police Dept Busted Laundering Tens of Millions For International Drug Cartels
By Justin Gardner

Bal Harbour, FL -- The village of Bal Harbour, population 2,513, may have a tiny footprint on the northern tip of Miami Beach, but its police department had grand aspirations of going after international drug traffickers, and making a few million dollars while they were at it.

The Bal Harbour PD and the Glades County Sheriff's Office set up a giant money laundering scheme with the purported goal of busting drug cartels and stemming the surge of drug dealing going on in the area. But it all fell apart when federal investigators and the Miami-Herald found strange things going on.

The two-year operation, which took in more than $55 million from criminal groups, resulted in zero arrests but netted $2.4 million for the police posing as money launderers. Members of the 12-person task force traveled far and wide to carry out their deals, from Los Angeles to New York to Puerto Rico.

Along the way, the small-town cops got a taste of luxury as they used the money for first-class flights, luxury hotels, Mac computers and submachine guns. Meanwhile, the Bal Harbour PD and Glades County Sheriffs were buying all sorts of fancy new equipment.

Besides these "official" uses of the money, confidential records obtained by the Miami-Herald show that officers withdrew hundreds of thousands of dollars with no record of where the money went.
"They were like bank robbers with badges," said Dennis Fitzgerald, an attorney and former Drug Enforcement Administration agent who taught undercover tactics for the U.S. State Department. "It had no law enforcement objective. The objective was to make money."The operation, which was not fully reported to federal authorities, funneled millions of dollars to overseas criminals and interfered with investigations being carried out on known money launderers.

The latest revelations show that at least 20 people in Venezuela were sent drug money from the Florida cops, including William Amaro Sanchez, the foreign minister under Hugo Chavez and now special assistant to President Nicolas Maduro.

They wired a total of $211,000 to Sanchez, even while the U.S. government was investigating Venezuelan government leaders involved in the drug trade. Instead of reporting their knowledge of Sanchez to federal agencies, the cops went on laundering money, taking their cut, and all the while aiding Sanchez in his machinations, which likely included political corruption.

Four other Venezuelan criminals and smugglers were major recipients of the millions being wired from the Bal Harbour PD and Glades County Sheriff's Office, including a figure tied to one of the largest drug cartels in the hemisphere.

These actions violated strict federal bans on sending illegal money overseas, and the Florida cops never investigated the backgrounds of the people receiving their laundered drug money.
"I can't think of a more podunk town than Bal Harbour -- not in a bad way. But in the sense that these cops would have otherwise been stopping traffic or shooting radar," said Ruben Oliva, who has represented alleged narco-traffickers since the 1980s. "In reality they were being launderers. The minute they started doing busts, it would have been over.

"This is like a movie. You've got these guys and they're flying all over. They're saying, 'Hey, I'm in the big leagues.' I've seen every kind of law enforcement money-laundering investigations. I've never seen anything like this. It's really one for the ages."After the Department of Justice busted the Bal Harbour PD for misspending seized money to pay police salaries, the Miami-Herald began deeper investigations and found a much bigger pool of money that was never noticed by the feds. Soon after that, the ambitious sting operation--which was really just a money-making scheme--began to fall apart.
"The Miami Herald gained unprecedented access to the confidential records of the undercover investigation, reviewing thousands of records including cash pickup reports, emails, DEA reports, bank statements and wire transfers for millions of dollars. The inquiry found:

▪ Police routinely withdrew cash -- thousands at a time -- totaling $1.3 million from undercover bank accounts, but to this day there are no records to show where the money was spent. "In all my years of law enforcement, I've never seen anything like it," Chief Overton said.

▪ Bal Harbour officials say they cannot find receipts for hundreds of thousands in expenses, including five-star hotel bookings, dinners that ran up to $1,000 and scores of purchases like laptops, iPads, electronic money counters, flower deliveries, and even iTunes downloads.

▪ While posing as launderers, police delivered nearly $20 million to storefront businesses in Miami-Dade to launder the money for drug groups -- gathering critical evidence against the business owners -- yet took no action against them. Years later, the businesses are still open, some still suspected by federal agents of laundering for the cartels."Cash deposits to SunTrust Bank totaling $28 million do not appear anywhere in police records. It's no coincidence that the operation was launched "at a time law enforcement agencies across Florida were looking to boost their budgets during one of the state's toughest economic periods."
"We had to find a revenue stream," said Duane Pottorff, chief of law enforcement for Glades. "It allowed us to have resources we wouldn't normally have."Federal authorities and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement have launched probes into the Bal Harbour police, which will surely confirm the rampant abuses of power. However, the fact that these types of shady operations, carried out with the help of agencies such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement, can occur at all is even more troubling.

Government creates a black market of drugs and blood money through prohibition, then under the War on Drugs it grants itself the power to break the law and get involved in money laundering operations. While the professed goal is to "sting" the bad guys, government rakes in millions upon millions of dollars to further bolster its prohibition and war on drugs.

The War on Drugs is the real scheme that should be investigated.

video here.
http://www.informationliberation.com/?id=53585
 

D528

Well-Known Member
How Much Do Taxpayers Pay For Police Misconduct?
by Asa Jay

Police brutality and misconduct lawsuits are a point of growing contention for many involved in the political arena.

Obviously, victims of police abuse deserve to be compensated for their damages. The problem is that it isn’t the police departments or the at-fault officers themselves that are monetarily held accountable in a misconduct lawsuit. It is the hard working taxpayers of a certain geographical area.

In a recent open-source effort launched by MuckRock.com, independent researchers are looking at data on police lawsuit payouts dating back to 2009. Among the types of lawsuits analyzed include wrongful-shooting deaths, excessive force complaints, illegal searches etc.

Early findings show that during the last five years a combined $16.6 million was spent by taxpayers in just four cities alone to settle 122 police-misconduct lawsuits. Those cities are: Indianapolis, Austin, San Jose, and San Francisco.

During that same time, taxpayers of just one city were expropriated for more than twice that. The people of Philadelphia paid $40 million to settle 584 of the 1,223 police-misconduct lawsuits filed against its department since January 2009, the website reported.

Philadelphia has 1.5 million residents.

“The report stemmed from requests the website sent to the 20 largest U.S. cities for information on police-lawsuit settlements,” MuckRock reporter Todd Feathers said. “The website is still parsing through data from some of those cities.”

Researchers don’t expect forthcoming numbers from additional cities to exceed those already recorded, Feathers said.

By comparison, taxpayers in the the city of New York have had to shell out more than $428,000,000 since 2009 for wrongful arrest and civil rights settlements.

Baltimore, Maryland has spent $5.7 million on settlements and awards, and another $5.8 million in legal fees.

The Chicago Sun-Times says Chicago residents have payed out nearly half a billion dollars in settlements over the past decade, and spent $84.6 million in fees, settlements, and awards last year alone.

Bloomberg News reported that in 2011, Los Angeles paid out $54 million, though that figure includes negligence and other claims. Oakland Police Beat reported that their city has paid out $74 million to settle 417 lawsuits since 1990.

The Denver Post reported that taxpayers in the Mile High City have paid $13 million over the last 10 years.

According to The Dallas Morning News, Dallas taxpayers have spent over $6 million since 2011.Minneapolis Public Radio put it’s city’s payout at $21 million since 2003.

So what can taxpayers do to thwart these costs? That’s a good question.

“In theory, the cost of these lawsuits are supposed to inspire better oversight, better government, and better policing,” says notable author, Washington Post columnist, and police brutality critic Radley Balko.“When taxpayers see their hard-earned money spent to compensate victims of police misconduct, they vote for political leaders who will hold cops more accountable. Or at least that’s the theory. I’m not sure how effective that is. I’ve seen little evidence that people generally vote on these issues, even in municipal elections.”

In a system that disproportionately favors the rich, fighting police in court can be extremely costly, but is it justice to take from taxpayers to pay for the misconduct of police? I don’t think so. It is also not moral.

So where should the money come from to compensate police abuse victims? Obviously it should come from the police themselves. Just like an employee in any other profession would be held accountable for their own personal conduct, police should too.

There are many proactive ways police can reduce legal costs. The most obvious is holding officers to higher standards and giving them proper training to deal with situations and individuals they may not be accustomed to. This includes individuals of mental and developmental disorders, who seem quantitatively more likely to die during a police encounter than those without such disabilities.

Technology also has an important role to play in reigning in misconduct.

According to The Bureau of Justice Statistics, in 2002, there were over 26,000 official police brutality complaints across the nation.

That’s a rate of 6.6 complaints for every 100 full-time officers. Of those complaints, eight percent resulted in disciplinary action. That means that only about one in every 200 police officers accused of excessive force were actually punished.

After the city of Rialto, California required its 70 police officers to wear portable video cameras on the job however, police brutality statistics fell by 60 percent in the city, according to a controlled study recorded by the department. In 2012 alone, complaints against Rialto police officers fell 88 percent.

This has reduced police misconduct settlements for the department dramatically.

Other possible ideas for departments would include rolling back spending, launching annual fundraisers, or setting aside separate legal funds to compensate victims.

Another alternative is to allow the market to sort out policing.

In the absence of a government law enforcement monopoly, private companies would be clamoring to provide citizens with the lowest cost, highest quality service available. This would reduce police misconduct because firms that employee violent law enforcers will loose market share as customers flee to their cheaper nonviolent competitors.

By no longer designating law enforcement a public good, private companies would have to foot the bill themselves for the abuses of their employees. This means, to avoid these costly pay-outs, firms would undoubtedly demand rigorous ethical and moral training and enforcement.

This may seem like a radical idea to some but a government monopoly, in any arena, reduces quality, increases costs and restricts personal choice. Certainly, having the individual liberty to choose whom provides you with law enforcement services is preferable to a forced government monopoly that demands taxpayer money to not only pay for its abuses, but to function at all.

For more on market policing see: The Answer To The Police State
 

D528

Well-Known Member
VIDEO: Police Cover For Fellow Cop After He Admits to Driving Drunk
Christopher Menahan | InformationLiberation



From the Kitsap Sun:
POULSBO — A Kitsap County sheriff's sergeant suspected of drunken driving in October was not arrested or charged with a crime, despite being found sitting behind the wheel of his personal vehicle, keys in hand, smelling of alcohol, covered in vomit and admitting to a Poulsbo police officer that he was drunk and had just driven himself home.

No outside law enforcement agency was called to the home of Sheriff's Sgt. Jim Porter to investigate the incident the night of Oct. 16, when Poulsbo Officer Jennifer Corn found Porter parked in his driveway, outside Poulsbo city limits, after receiving reports of a possible drunken driver leaving Regal Cinemas on Edvard Street.

After hearing details of the case, an experienced DUI defense attorney said it was "ridiculous" that no arrest occurred.

In her report of the encounter, Corn wrote that she had known Porter for about 18 years. Porter is a 23-year veteran of the office and was promoted to sergeant in 2003.

Fellow Sheriff's Sgt. Scott Dickson and Poulsbo Chief Al Townsend were called to the scene. Townsend later said Corn's actions were appropriate given the circumstances.

From a review of Corn's report and her body camera footage, obtained from the city by the Kitsap Sun through a public records request, it does not appear Corn asked Porter to perform voluntary field sobriety tests, did not ask him to take a voluntary field Breathalyzer, did not look in his car and did not ask whether he had taken any medications.

In fact, Corn is heard struggling with how to react and how to contain Porter, who did not follow her directions and told her to go away. Corn claimed that she did not know it was Porter until she saw him, dazed in his Jeep.

"I would like to pretend like this never happened, but I can't," Corn says in the footage, adding that she hoped there was nothing that would legally "stick."

Corn did ask if he were drunk and whether he had driven, to which Porter replied "yeah" and "yes," which is audible on Corn's body camera footage.


Earlier that evening, at 9:25 p.m., another Poulsbo officer had contacted Porter in the parking lot of the movie theater. An employee called 911 to report a highly intoxicated man sitting in his car and had waved off a suggestion from theater customers that he not drive.

Porter refused to show the officer his identification. He also refused an offer of a ride home or a call for a cab, but Officer Danielle Branes — who has since resigned from the department for unrelated reasons — determined the car was owned by a James Porter.
In her body camera footage, which shows Porter in the Jeep, Branes says she can smell alcohol and later describes Porter as "totally wasted." Branes told Porter he was not in trouble but admonished him not to drive and suggested he toss his keys in the back of the vehicle. She asked theater employees to call 911 if Porter drove away, according to her report, and then left.

At about 11:10 p.m., a theater employee called 911 to say the Jeep had left, and Corn wrote in her report that considering the level of intoxication — as reported by Branes — she was concerned and drove the route to the registered owner's house off Clear Creek Road "to ensure he did not crash somewhere." Porter lives about 5 miles from the theater, outside city limits.

When Corn arrived at Porter's house, along with Reserve Officer Joshua Krebs, who was riding with her, she recognized an older model Sheriff's Office car parked at his house, which is when Corn wrote that she realized it was Porter. Corn is married to a Kitsap sheriff's deputy and is a former reserve deputy for the office.

"I just came to make sure you made it home, but seeing you in the vehicle I had to check on you," Corn says in the video. "I'm wishing I hadn't, but now I'm stuck."

"You are not stuck," Porter says to Corn.

"I am, because somebody saw you drive out of there," Corn says.
Read all the juicy details in the Kitsap Sun. You can see in the video all the officers go out of their way not to arrest him and lament the fact they didn't look the other way.

While people all over the US are being trapped in checkpoints and having their blood forcibly taken from them at gunpoint, the police themselves can do whatever the hell they want.
 

D528

Well-Known Member
fbi , cops , cia , all pigs to me !
FBI Frames Mentally Ill Ex-Con in New Year's Eve ISIS Attack

FBI bought masks, zip-ties, knives, duct tape, ammonia and latex gloves
Kurt Nimmo


NBC News reported on Thursday Emanuel Lutchman was in contact with a member of the Islamic State in Syria who urged him to attack diners at a restaurant in Rochester, New York, with a machete.

It turns out Lutchman was instead in contact with an FBI informant who received thousands of dollars from the agency.

He didn't have money to buy masks, zip-ties, knives, duct tape, ammonia and latex gloves that were allegedly supposed to be used in the attack, so the FBI picked up the tab, according to NBC.

He reportedly tried to impress his government handlers by talking about pressure cooker bombs and knives.

"New years [sic] is here soon. Do operations and kill some kuffar," the informant told Lutchman, an ex-con with mental problems who had recently attempted suicide.

Beverley Carridice, Lutchman's grandmother, said he had suffered from psychiatric problems since childhood and was not taking his psychiatric medications when she saw him in August.

Carridice said Lutchman would not have planned an attack on his own. "Not on his own," she said. "He's not the type of person. But he's easily persuaded," she told NBC.

Lutchman was arrested on Wednesday after he recorded a video tape pledging allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, said to be the leader of the Islamic State. He will be charged with providing material support to a terrorist organization and faces up to 20 years in prison, according to the Justice Department.



"According to the complaint, as part of Emanuel Lutchman's attempt to provide material support to ISIL, he planned to kill innocent civilians on New Year's Eve in the name of the terrorist organization." said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Carlin said in a statement. "Thankfully, law enforcement was able to intervene and thwart Lutchman's deadly plans."

"The arrest of Emanuel Lutchman is an important reminder of the new normal of global terrorism," said New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

The "new normal" is the FBI setting up mentally ill patsies and then announcing it has prevented terror attacks.

The FBI has arranged a large number of terrorism "stings" since the attacks of September 11, 2001, in order to make the case that it is tracking down and prosecuting terrorists.

A report by Mother Jones and the Investigative Reporting Program at the University of California-Berkley released in 2011 revealed that it is now common practice for the FBI to create terror plots from scratch and entrap witless and even mentally ill patsies.

"The report reveals that the FBI regularly infiltrates communities where they suspect terrorist-minded individuals to be engaging with others. Regardless of their intentions, agents are sent in to converse within the community, find suspects that could potentially carry out 'lone wolf' attacks and then, more or less, encourage them to do so. By providing weaponry, funds and a plan, FBI-directed agents will encourage otherwise-unwilling participants to plot out terrorist attacks, only to bust them before any events fully materialize," RT reported last August.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
We have the police force we're willing to tolerate in this country. Ferguson, MO residents decided they wouldn't tolerate their abusive police department, and look what happened.

I think it's time everyone else did the same thing.
 

red w. blue

Well-Known Member
We have the police force we're willing to tolerate in this country. Ferguson, MO residents decided they wouldn't tolerate their abusive police department, and look what happened.

I think it's time everyone else did the same thing.
You mean act stupid. You seem to be doing more than your part.
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
We have the police force we're willing to tolerate in this country. Ferguson, MO residents decided they wouldn't tolerate their abusive police department, and look what happened.

I think it's time everyone else did the same thing.
You mean burn down your own community to protest the police not protecting people and their property...?

Yeah, good call.
 
Top