Abuse of Power Thread (Cops, Governments, Etc.) - Part 1

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UPDATE: All Six Cops Charged in Freddie Gray’s Death Have Posted Bail

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The six Baltimore police officers accused of being responsible for Freddie Gray’s death have posted bail. The bail for all six—including the officer charged with murder—was lower than the $500,000 set for 18-year-old protester Allen Bullock, who was photographed smashing a cop car and charged with eight misdemeanors.

Caesar Goodson (second degree murder, three counts of manslaughter), Alicia White (manslaughter, second degree assault), William Porter (manslaughter, second degree assault), and Brian Rice (manslaughter, two counts second degree assault) posted $350,000 bail; Edward Nero (two counts of second degree assault) and Garrett Miller (two counts of second degree assault) both had bail set at $250,000. All except for White have been released.

http://fox43.com/2015/05/01/6-baltimore-police-officers-charged-in-the-death-of-freddie-gray/

Lets see if anything actually sticks
 
UPDATE: Other Prisoner in Van with Freddie Gray Denies Police Account

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On Wednesday, the Washington Post published a police report alleging that Freddie Gray had injured himself while being transported in police custody, based on an account given by another prisoner in the van. That man, Donta Allen, has come forward, speaking to CBS Baltimore’s WJZ today.

“I am Donta Allen. I am the one who was in the van with Freddie Gray,” he said. “All I did was go straight to the station, but I heard a little banging like he was banging his head.”

“They trying to make it seem like I told them that, I made it like Freddie Gray did that to himself,” Allen said. “Why the f*** would he do that to himself?”

Allen had been arrested for stealing cigarettes and was never charged, WJZ reports.

“I had two options today right, either come and talk to y’all and get my credibility straight with y’all and not get killed,” Allen said, “or not tell a true story.”

“The only reason I’m doing this is because they put my name in a bad state.”

http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2015/...gray-breaks-his-silence/#.VULPHPIwHJI.twitter

The police trying to say Gray did it to himself is insane
 
Top American Psychologists Aided CIA Torture Program

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According to a new report, the American Psychological Association collaborated in secret with the C.I.A. and the Bush administration to establish legal and ethical justifications for the torture program. The report focuses on the emails, newly disclosed, of a recently deceased researcher at the RAND Corporation who was later a defense contractor.

The report is authored by three long-standing critics of the APA: Stephen Soldz, Steven Reisner, and Nathaniel Raymond. “The A.P.A. secretly coordinated with officials from the C.I.A., White House and the Department of Defense to create an A.P.A. ethics policy on national security interrogations which comported with then-classified legal guidance authorizing the C.I.A. torture program,” they conclude.

According to the New York Times, the report examines closely the email archives of Scott Gerwehr, a researcher “who had close ties to behavioral scientists at both the psychological association and in the national security agencies.”

In 2004, George Tenet suspended the torture program in order to make sure that the Bush administration still supported it. (The APA ordered an independent review in November of its actions during this period, the Times reports.) At this point, the report’s authors contend, the APA stepped in. From the Times:

In early June 2004, a senior official with the association, the nation’s largest professional organization for psychologists, issued an invitation to a carefully selected group of psychologists and behavioral scientists inside the government to a private meeting to discuss the crisis and the role of psychologists in the interrogation program.

Psychologists from the C.I.A. and other agencies met with association officials in July, and by the next year the association issued guidelines that reaffirmed that it was acceptable for its members to be involved in the interrogation program.

To emphasize their argument that the association grew too close to the interrogation program, the critics’ new report cites a 2003 email from a senior psychologist at the C.I.A. to a senior official at the psychological association. In the email, the C.I.A. psychologist appears to be confiding in the association official about the work of James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, the private contractors who developed and helped run the enhanced interrogation program at the C.I.A.’s secret prisons around the world.

In the email, written years before the involvement of the two contractors in the interrogation program was made public, the C.I.A. psychologist explains to the association official that the contractors “are doing special things to special people in special places.”​

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/01/u...column-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news

That is disgusting
 
One Police Officer Makes 93 Percent of Colorado Town's Budget in Tickets

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Brad Viner is the only police officer in the town of Campo, Colorado. The 400 traffic tickets he wrote last year accounted for 93 percent of the 107-person town’s revenue. “Basically, the police department pays for the town,” he told the Grand Junction Free Press, seemingly without irony.

Viner, KUSA reports, essentially polices a speed trap: he sits in an unmarked car at either end of the town and tickets people as the speed limit on Highway 287 drops from 65 MPH to 30 MPH. Those tickets, Viner says, are all issued out of a concern for “public safety.”

“Everybody is treated the same. If you’re 10 (MPH) or over, you should get a ticket,” Viner told KUSA. “If a kid darts out in the middle of the road from one of these sides streets, that 10 over could cost a life.”

Campo previously had a three-officer police force—drama led to Viner being the only officer in town. In 2013, Campo’s then mayor, Ray Johnson, was busted with his twin sons siphoning $5,000 worth of gasoline for their personal vehicles. One of Johnson’s sons was also one of the town’s three cops. The brouhaha surrounding the gas siphoning scandal apparently led to the resignation of another Campo cop, leaving Viner to stand alone.

According to Rocky Mountain PBS, the state average for town revenue made from traffic tickets is 4 percent—Campo, along with a handful of small towns in Colorado, rake in more than half their budgets in traffic fines.

The town’s mayor, Tim Grey, has openly admitted that Campo’s budget is almost entirely dependent on Viner issuing those tickets.

“Yes, if we don’t have revenue coming in, and presently, most of our revenue comes in from tickets, then we won’t have the money to pay anyone,” he told the Free Press.

Viner even told KUSA that he had been ordered by the Grey to write more tickets, or be fired; Grey, naturally, denies ever saying this.

http://www.9news.com/story/news/loc...-biggest-little-traffic-ticket-farm/26685049/

That seems like it's all real fair
 
I'm from a small town called Lake Alfred in FL and they do the same thing so I'm familiar with it
 
I've seen it all the time around in my area even though it's much bigger. There's always cops out by the local donut shop where the national highway meets the city limits. It's pretty crazy that they have one guy writing tickets to pay for the city.
 
Everything You Need to Know About Drug Incarceration Rates Across the US

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The United States has only 5 % of the world’s population, but 25 % of its prisoners. The biggest contributing factor to our booming prison population? Drugs, drugs, and more drugs.

The Coalition Against Drug Abuse has just released a report investigating how federal drug sentencing varies across the country, pulling statistics from a 2013 report by the United States Sentencing Commission. They’ve packaged their findings into a series of simple maps and infographics, which give us a detailed picture of just how much the response to drug related offenses varies from state to state. Still, the bottom line is clear: If you’re convicted of a trafficking offense in a US federal court, there’s a good chance you’re going to serve years.

Looking at the top map, we can see that drug sentencings vary starkly across the country, with Western states locking more people away for meth, states along the Mexican border coming down hard on marijuana, and Eastern seaboard states tending to incarcerate for crack, cocaine and heroine. The infographics below break things down further, revealing which states are more or less likely to incarcerate a person for a drug offense, and how sentence durations vary.

A few interesting observations:

-Crack and cocaine (combined) are the drugs that most frequently send people to prison in the US, while pot comes in a close second.

-You really don’t want to be caught trafficking drugs in South Carolina, or Wyoming.

-The proportion of drug-related sentences in West Virginia is nearly double the national average, reflecting the state’s aggressive response to its high drug overdose death rate. (Don’t do drugs in West Virginia.)

-New Mexico has the highest number of trafficking sentences (21.8 per 100,000 residents) but the lowest average time incarcerated (34 months). It’s apparently a revolving door in New Mexican prisons.

Have a look at the numbers yourself:

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You can check out the Coalition Against Drug Abuse’s website for a detailed description of their methodology and more information.

http://drugabuse.com/featured/state-sentencing-how-drug-sentencing-varies-across-the-us/

Interesting info
 
Ga. Sheriff Refuses to Talk After Shooting Woman in Stomach

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On Sunday evening, a Georgia sheriff allegedly shot a woman in the stomach inside a model home in Lawrenceville, Ga. Police said Clayton County Sheriff Victor Hill “refused to cooperate” when investigators arrived on the scene. He still hasn’t been arrested or questioned.

Hill and the woman, identified by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution as a 43-year-old real estate agent named Gwenevere McCord, were the only two in the model home at the time of the shooting and were apparently acquaintances.

McCord was rushed to a nearby hospital, where she remains in critical condition. “She’s not able to give any information due to her condition,” police Sgt. Brian Doan told WSB-TV.

After calling the shooting in just after 5:30 pm Sunday, Hill reportedly refused to cooperate or give statement to responding Gwinnett police officers. As of Monday afternoon, he still hadn’t given a statement to police and has not been arrested.

From the AJC:

Despite his refusal to answer questions from investigators, police allowed Hill to leave the scene on his own. According to Georgia law, “a sitting sheriff cannot be charged except by a warrant issued by a Superior Court judge,” Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter said Monday morning in an interview with AM750 and 95.5 FM News/Talk WSB, a news partner of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

“You have to have the warrant issued before the sheriff can be arrested,” Porter said. “What I’m trying to figure out is, does that apply to a sheriff all the time, or only in the performance of his official duty.”

He said police Monday were trying to reconstruct the incident, “which is a little more difficult because Sheriff Hill declined to give a statement yesterday.”​

Porter told WSB he’ll make a decision “on what, if any, appropriate charges there are” once authorities have a better idea what happened inside the model home. He estimated that process would take a “few days.” In the meantime, Hill remains free and—because Gov. Nathan Deal is the only person in the state who can fire him—employed.

“I only know what I’ve read in the newspaper and heard on the radio,” Deal told the AJC. “It’s very premature. I do not have the ability to remove anybody — sheriff or otherwise — at least until he’s indicted. He has not been indicted, and whether or not he will be is a question that remains to be seen. If and when that happens, we’ll follow the course and the process that the law allows.”

http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/deputies-clayton-county-sheriff-involved-shooting/nk8C2/

That's insane. Let's see what happens if any of us go and shoot someone in the stomach and then just try to walk away
 
Baltimore Cops Deny Shooting Man During Chaotic Arrest Captured on Video

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According to several witnesses, including producers at Fox News, Baltimore cops chased down and shot a man in the street this afternoon, but police officials say that no shooting occurred and the man was hospitalized “out of an abundance of caution.”

On Twitter, Fox’s Greta Van Sustren said that a crew working for the channel saw a man wounded by the officers. Van Sustren described the victim as “alive, but in bad shape” before being transported to the hospital, and Fox cameras caught footage of man being put into an ambulance.

That story runs counter to what was reported by witnesses at the scene, including one woman who spoke to a Fox reporter on the ground. That woman said that the victim, who she said was unarmed, was sitting with his friends on a bench when police approached. She said the man was shot in the back as he fled on foot.

The chaotic post-shooting scene was captured by several Ustream broadcasts. One, which has been archived here, showed a man lying on the sidewalk and surrounded by a crowd and several officers. The stream shows some bystanders arguing with police, which led to at least one man being sprayed directly in the face with pepper spray.

Later, after Baltimore police officially refuted witness accounts of the incident, Fox’s Shep Smith retracted his network’s report with a bizarre apology.

http://gawker.com/witnesses-say-baltimore-police-shot-man-in-back-cops-d-1702088673

Lots of links and vids at the link, way to do some fair and balanced reporting FAUX news. It's always good to just say exactly what the police say
 
Cops Handcuff "Combative" Five-Year-Old in Special Needs Class

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The parents of five-year-old Connor Ruiz have vowed to sue the Indian River Central School District in Philadelphia, New York, after their “out of control,” “combative” son was handcuffed and shackled by police officers at his elementary school.

Police were called to a classroom for special needs students at Philadelphia Primary School last Wednesday morning when Connor was reportedly “screaming, kicking, punching, and biting” school staff, who had previously attempted—for two hours—to calm him using “nonviolent crisis intervention.” From the Watertown Daily Times:

Trooper Keller said school staff notified police that Connor “was jumping from cabinets and desks, was attempting to jump out of a window ... he was stabbing himself with pencils and eating paper.”

The boy allegedly bit off a piece of foam from a padded play mat “and tried to cause himself to choke,” he said, adding that the school nurse was able to remove the foam from his mouth before troopers arrived.

He said Trooper Steven Watkins initially arrived at the classroom, and was later joined by Trooper Keith Kloster. The pair tried to restrain the child, using first verbal, then physical techniques, he said, but they were unsuccessful. They then decided to take him to Samaritan [Medical Center] for a mental health evaluation.​

According to the Daily Times, officers handcuffed Connor and carried him to their vehicle, where they shackled his feet “because he was attempting to kick and be physically combative.”

Connor’s parents were then notified by school staff that their son had been taken to the hospital for evaluation by police because he “posed a risk to himself, students, school staff, and troopers.” A doctor at the hospital told the child’s mother, Chelsea, that Connor did not need to see a psychiatrist following the episode, and that “he was just being a boy and threw a tantrum.”

“An officer told me they had to handcuff his wrists and ankles for their safety,” Chelsea Ruiz, 25, told the Daily Times. “I told him that was ridiculous. How could someone fear for their safety when it comes to a small, 5-year-old child? He said that he understood because he had four children of his own.”

Chelsea Ruiz told the paper that her son was diagnosed in the past year with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, and oppositional defiant disorder; he had started in the special needs class at Philadelphia Primary two weeks earlier.

Connor’s parents and the school district are now caught in a back-and-forth about whether they consented to having Connor taken to the hospital by police. The school claims “our records show the father OK’d the transport.” Ryan Ruiz, Connor’s father, denies having given consent.

“They called me at work and told me Connor was acting up and trying to eat crayons and that he was being taken to the hospital for a psychiatric evaluation,” Ryan Ruiz, 25, told the Daily Times. “I would have told them not to do it, but they didn’t ask me. One of us could have came to try to calm him down, but I was never asked. It would have taken me about 20 minutes to get there.”

The parents claim Connor is now “terrified of going back to school”; they have since pulled him from class at Philadelphia Primary.

“I’ll be suing for emotional distress, child cruelty and endangerment for cuffing his hands and feet,” Chelsea Ruiz said. “I will make sure that I get every person who was involved in this to take responsibility.”

http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/...le-5-year-old-special-needs-student--20150502

I'd sue the hell out of them too, that is ridiculous
 
That's touchy right there honestly. If dude was really stabbing himself, then the cops are darn if they do and darned if they don't. If he would have poked his eyes out, people would be screaming for their jobs and wanting to sue. I don't blame the cops for handcuffing the kid for one bit, even though he is 5.
 
Detective Terence Green was shot and killed from ambush as he and other officers responded to reports of shots fired inside a house near the intersection of Chastain Way and Parks Trail at approximately 1:00 am.

The subject who lived in the home was known to police through frequent contacts with the department. Responding officers were unable to locate him inside the home and began searching the neighborhood after receiving additional calls stating the man was attempting to get into nearby homes.

As officers checked the area the man opened fire on them from a concealed position in the dark and fog. Detective Green was struck in the back of the head and another officer's duty belt and radio was struck as they attempted to seek cover. Other officers returned fired, wounding the man, and then took him into custody.

Detective Green was transported to Grady Memorial Hospital where he succumbed to his wounds a short time later.

Detective Green had served with the Fulton County Police Department for 22 years. He is survived by his wife, four sons, parents, and brother.




He was 48 years old.

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Maybe we can have some respect for what the cops do to keep law abiding people safe? Maybe we could accept that the criminals abusing the law, are why we need such officers in the first place!
 
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Deputy U.S. Marshal Josie Wells was shot and killed as he and other members of the U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force attempted to serve an arrest warrant on a double-murder suspect at the Elm Grove Motel in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Shots were exchanged as the team attempted to take the man into custody and Deputy Wells was struck. He was transported to a local hospital by another deputy marshal but succumbed to his wounds a short time later. The subject was shot multiple times and died the following day.

Deputy Marshal Wells had served with the United States Marshals Service for four years and was assigned to the Southern District Office in Mississippi. He is survived by his expectant wife, parents, three brothers, and four sisters. His father and three brothers are all law enforcement officers.



He was 27 years old. Married, with a wife expecting.

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Thank you sir.
 
Police Officer Michael Johnson was shot and killed as he and other officers responded to a suicide threat at an apartment in the 2600 block of Senter Road shortly after 6:40 pm.

A friend of the subject in the apartment had called police and stated the man was drunk and was possibly having thoughts of hurting himself. As officers approached the building the man stepped onto the balcony and opened fire without warning, fatally wounding Officer Johnson. Other officers returned fire and provided aid to Officer Johnson.

The subject was found dead on his balcony at approximately 3:30 am after the SWAT team's robot made entry into the apartment.

Officer Johnson had served with the San Jose Police Department for 14 years.



Only 38.

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Police Officer Tyler Stewart was shot and killed while investigating a domestic violence incident at an apartment complex in the 800 block of West Clay Avenue at approximately 1:30 pm.

He had made contact with the subject and met him at an apartment where he had been staying. During the conversation Officer Stewart asked the man if he could pat him down for weapons. The subject suddenly pulled out a handgun from his pocket and immediately opened fire, striking Officer Stewart. He then continued to fire after Officer Stewart fell to the ground.

Despite being wounded, Officer Stewart was able to activate an emergency alert button, but did not answer radio calls. Responding officers discovered him suffering from the gunshot wound and he was transported to a local hospital where he later died.

The subject who shot Officer Stewart committed suicide nearby after walking from the scene.

Officer Stewart had served with the Flagstaff Police Department for less than one year. He is survived by his parents, his girlfriend, three sisters and two brothers-in-law. His father and grandfather are officers with the Arizona Department of Public Safety and his uncle is an officer with the Phoenix Police Department.



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Just 24 years old.
 
So you're saying because some cops paid the ultimate price that puts all forms of authority above criticism?
 
Domestic abuse is one of the worst calls to go to. The woman most of the time calls but ends up turning on the cops once they want to take him to jail. Sad story.
 
The low accounts of cop abuse/killing civilians on a per arrest basis get ignored. I don't see threads honoring the majority of cops who are keeping the streets safer. We should equally be criticizing the non-law abiding folks that put everyone INCLUDING the cops in danger.

I see very little criticism of these guys with multiple arrests on their rap sheets for crimes from drugs, to assault, to battery, to theft, etc... Had they not been criminals in the first place, many of these arrests that went wrong would have been different. Certainly in the cases of ones that attacked the cops during detainment. Instead of questioning their lifestyle choice and actions, we focus on just law enforcement. That isn't exactly fair social critique either.
 
Please stop spamming this thread, nobody ever stated that there aren't numerous men and women who wear the badge that do wonderful things and some who make the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty. That is not what this thread is about. This thread is to point out any abuse from a person in power
 
Is there not an inherent danger of losing perspective with this "down with the man" view that cherry picks cases for one side? A growing resentment to the feeble minded that won't objectively consider the factors from both sides of the fence. That is what I was addressing by posting those officer death accounts. Are there not contributory factors in many of these cases inducing such officer reactions?
 
Yeah, guys...

Give up on reforming the police...

It must betray the memory of dead police to fight corruption and abuse. :dry:
 
Is there not an inherent danger of losing perspective with this "down with the man" view that cherry picks cases for one side? A growing resentment to the feeble minded that won't objectively consider the factors from both sides of the fence. That is what I was addressing by posting those officer death accounts. Are there not contributory factors in many of these cases inducing such officer reactions?


This thread shows what's broken in our system.

If you want to make a "the police and government is perfect and above criticism" thread, go ahead and start one.

No one is stopping you.
 
That seems completely unrelated to the point. A most illogical response.
Eh, still got him on ignore. The downfall of the quoting, which bypasses ignore feature :argh: Ah well, nothing is perfect ;)
 
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