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

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It was reported/confirmed today that the girl in the video is an orphan. Her mother passed and I guess she's been going through it. Would explain the claims that she was usually quiet.

I guess now everyone has the other side of the story they've been asking for. I'll see if I can post a link to the news.
 
It was reported/confirmed today that the girl in the video is an orphan. Her mother passed and I guess she's been going through it. Would explain the claims that she was usually quiet.

I guess now everyone has the other side of the story they've been asking for. I'll see if I can post a link to the news.

Poor girl.:( I hope a nice adult comes forward and helps her through this mess.
 
I've only seen the one video of this incident. I could have bought that he tried to pull her out of her desk, she resisted and the desk flipped over as a result (those desks suck), but after that? Theres no reason to drag her across the floor before checking to see if she's all right, etc.
 
He shouldnt have even been touching her. Period. The only time a school employee should be touching a student is if the student has a weapon, is trying to hurt another student(s) or a teacher, or when the student is in danger. Otherwise keep your hands off the kids. This girl wasnt hurting anyone, she had no weapon, and she wasnt hurting herself or in any danger...well, she wasnt in danger until Officer Slam got involved. So they had no reason for placing hands on that girl.

If they wanted the girl to leave the class they should have talked her out of that desk. Even if it took all day and calling in a state social services worker to deal with her thats what should have been done.

But, nope, they called in Officer Slam because they knew he would remove her quickly with all the sense and finese of a pissed off ape.

Irresponsible impatient adults. The lot of em.
 
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Very glad he got fired. I'm sure he's feeling very proud of himself now for manhandling a calm teenage girl who was remaining in her seat.
 
I just don't understand why this cop thought it would be OK to do what he did? I mean, what planet is he on thinking it's OK to man handle a child like that?
 
Or even an adult for that matter had it been similar circumstances.
 
We are raising a generation of entitled brats who think they are above all authority and the law. What are we teaching “children” and young adults when a 17- or 18-year-old can disrupt a class, ignore 3 adult authority figures, and STRIKE an officer, and the officer gets fired for handling the situation?
http://madworldnews.com/applaud-termination-officer/

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That blog site is not newsworthy.
 
Personally, I think the school is at fault too. Why call a cop? Are teachers so distant from the kids now, that they can't tell when something is wrong? Why not get one of the guidance counselors or something? Really, after Columbine, teachers and staff should be made more aware to look out for disturbancies amongst the kids.
 
Personally, I think the school is at fault too. Why call a cop? Are teachers so distant from the kids now, that they can't tell when something is wrong? Why not get one of the guidance counselors or something? Really, after Columbine, teachers and staff should be made more aware to look out for disturbancies amongst the kids.

Pretty much every school in the USA has a school resource officer that is there every day. If there is a situation where force is necessary it absolves the school of any liability I would assume
 
Kiss on the cheek triggers trouble for same sex couple on Hawaiian vacation

There has to be more to this story than we are getting.

What started as a kiss inside a grocery store on an island vacation landed Courtney Wilson and Taylor Guerrero in jail and stuck far away from home without money for months, they say.

It was supposed to be a relaxing holiday in the place that feels closest to paradise -- Hawaii. The women in their 20s had been dating for two years and wanted a break from their daily grind in Los Angeles.

Then came the kiss at a Foodland store in Honolulu.

"We were holding hands and I was kissing her cheek," Guerrero said. "We were just happy to be out here," Wilson chimed in. "We were just being goofy," Guerrero added.

They were interrupted by yells and saw two people -- one a man in uniform.

"They called after us and told us basically you can't do that. Take that somewhere else," Wilson said. She said she thought it was just a couple of rude random guys. So the women went about buying their snacks.

Calling police on police


But when they made their way to the checkout counter, the man in uniform, off-duty police officer Bobby Harrison, followed them.

"He told us that he was going to find the manager he was going to sign a trespass form and that we were no longer going to be allowed in any Foodland establishments because of the conduct of our behavior. So, being confused as to what exactly we did and how that was just I called the police myself," Wilson said.

CNN has reached out for comments from Officer Harrison.

After Wilson called 9-1-1 saying an officer was harassing her, the situation escalated, she said. Wilson claimed she tried to walk outside to find the store's address to pass on to police, but Officer Harrison grabbed her and wouldn't let go.

Then her girlfriend tried to intervene, getting between the two.

While she talked to 9-1-1, Wilson said she tried to walk outside, and Officer Harrison grabbed her and then pushed her girlfriend.

"He would not let go of her," Guerrero said.

Exchange of punches

Then Guerrero fell and hit her head on the counter, Wilson said. A tussle ensued. Guerrero said the officer punched her in the face when she tried to push him off her girlfriend.

They also dealt blows themselves, kicking and pushing Harrison, and hitting him in the face, Wilson and Guerrero said. His glasses broke. It ended with the two women in zip tie handcuffs and an employee holding them down.

When police they had called showed up, officers arrested Wilson and Guerrero on charges of assaulting an officer, the women said.

They spent two days in jail and spent all their vacation money to bond out, they said. They were told they would have to check in every couple of weeks with the bail bondsman until their initial court date.

Stuck, no money

But with no more money they were forced to stay in Hawaii. Wilson and Guerrero found a friend of a family member who took them in for a while, then a stranger they met who did the same, but eventually they ended up on the streets until they found temporary jobs.

They are now staying with co-workers they hardly know, they said.

"It has been really really tough, but so many good people have helped us," Wilson said.

About five months after being arrested suddenly, they were free to go.

The women filed a civil suit against the city and Officer Harrison. The court documents said that the court dropped the criminal case against them "with prejudice," which means police cannot re-file on the same incident.

Officer 'on full duty'

The police department has responded to the civil lawsuit in a statement.

"The Honolulu police department opened an internal investigation based on the allegations in the lawsuit. The officer has 26 years of service. The officer is currently on full duty," it said.

The women say there may have been surveillance video of the incident, but that they were told the tapes went missing. CNN contacted the store for comment, but is has not responded.

Wilson and Guerrero finally have enough funds to buy their plane tickets out of Hawaii. They never thought they'd be so happy to be able to leave what they once considered paradise.
CNN
 
Pretty much every school in the USA has a school resource officer that is there every day. If there is a situation where force is necessary it absolves the school of any liability I would assume

I would assume they are there to deal with the real problems like drugs being found in lockers, or outright fighting and bullying.
 
Judge tried to bribe FBI agent with beer to get family’s text messages

There aren't too many details as to who or why the judge was seeking these texts but he clearly thought the FBI agent could get him access to them.

"ee what you can do without drawing attention. This involves family so I don't want anyone to know."

That's what a North Carolina local judge told an FBI official in seeking the agent's cooperation to get the text messages of two different phone numbers, according to the federal indictment (PDF) lodged against Wayne County Superior Court Judge Arnold Ogden Jones.

How much is that illegal, warrantless surveillance worth?

According to the indictment:
JONES asked the FBI Officer what he thought was a fair number, stating, "You tell me, I'm serious." JONES confirmed that he did not want the FBI Officer to only obtain and deliver the text messages as a favor by stating, "No, no, no, You've had to take time, and I'm glad to do something. Do you follow me?" JONES and the FBI Officer initially agreed upon "a couple of cases of beer" as the amount of the payment from JONES to the FBI Officer.
On November 3, days after that October 27 conversation, the judge told the FBI officer, whom the judge knew worked for the FBI, that he had his "paycheck" in the back seat of his car. Eventually, they agreed on $100 in cash as payment instead, according to the indictment. "In return, the FBI Officer delivered to [Jones] an FBI disk that was represented to contain the text messages requested by [Jones]," according to the indictment.

The judge was arrested (PDF) Wednesday and released without bond (PDF). A Wayne County Superior Court clerk told Ars that the judge, who did not immediately respond for comment, is on administrative leave pending the indictment's outcome.

Jones is accused of three felonies, carrying a maximum 37 years in prison if convicted. Two of the charges concern allegations of bribing a public official. The third is "attempted corrupt influence of official proceeding."

The indictment does not name the FBI official or the family members in question.

Local media described Jones as a "registered Democrat who was elected to an eight-year term on the Superior Court bench in 2008, [and] is the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission chairman. The commission was created by the General Assembly in 2006 and began operating in 2007. Since then, the commission has reviewed hundreds of innocence claims and conducted multiple hearings, some of which have resulted in the freeing of inmates wrongfully convicted of murder."
Ars Technica
 
Death of Fox Lake, Illinois, officer a 'carefully staged suicide'

This officer staged his suicide to look like a murder when it was becoming evident he was skimming from a police fund meant to help young people who wanted to become police officers.

Initially hailed as a hero after his death, Fox Lake, Illinois, police Lt. Joe Gliniewicz is now likely to be remembered by another label: a betrayer.

What once appeared to be the killing of an officer in the line of duty turned out to be "a carefully staged suicide," George Filenko, Lake County Major Crimes Task Force commander, said Wednesday.

"This staged suicide was the end result of extensive criminal acts that Gliniewicz had been committing," Filenko said, announcing the conclusions of the investigation into the officer's September 1 death.

The officer had been stealing and laundering money from a police department program that mentored young people hoping to become law enforcement officers, Filenko said. Gliniewicz, a leader in that program, had been stealing money for at least seven years, he said.

The investigation found that the officer, who had experience creating mock crime scenes, staged his suicide to make it look like a homicide.

The officer placed his equipment at the scene in an "attempt to mislead first responders and investigators to believe this was a homicide," Filenko said.


'Ultimate betrayal'

Far from being a hero, Gliniewicz "committed the ultimate betrayal" with his actions over the past several years, Filenko said. "He behaved for years in a manner completely contrary to the image he portrayed."

Another reversal occurred Wednesday. A group that gave Gliniewicz's family $15,000 asked for the money back.

The 100 Club, which assists families of first responders who lose their lives in the line of duty, said it "must stay true" to the group's mission.

Gliniewicz's family didn't reply to that request but issued a statement asking for privacy as it coped "with the loss of a beloved husband and father."

Gliniewicz was well known in Fox Lake. Before becoming a police officer, Gliniewicz served active duty in the Army and Reserve from 1980 to 2007, earning the nickname GI Joe from those who knew him. He left the military with a rank of first sergeant.

The initial assumptions shifted when investigators "didn't see anything to indicate there was a struggle physically" in the officer's death, Filenko said.

Investigators then found that the village of Fox Lake, north of Chicago, had started "a thorough internal audit of all of their assets" that Gliniewicz was concerned might unearth proof of his illicit financial activities, Filenko said.

Investigators recovered 6,500 text messages Gliniewicz had deleted, Filenko said, and looked at thousands of pages of bank statements that showed financial improprieties.

"We just went where the facts took us," he said.

The investigation indicates at least two others were involved in criminal activity, though that inquiry is ongoing, and police are not commenting further for now, he said.

Authorities released text messages Gliniewicz exchanged with unidentified people in which he discussed the Explorer Post, the youth organization sponsored by the police department. Gliniewicz wanted sponsorship moved to another organization so the city administrator would not scrutinize the post finances.

"Chief won't sign off to move it to american legion and if she gets ahold of the old checking account, im pretty well f***ed," a May 13 text said.

On June 25 he advised that same person "to start dumping money into that account or you will be visiting me in JAIL!! The 1600 and the 777 all came from there..."

At Wednesday's press briefing, Filenko was asked whether police allowed the narrative of Gliniewicz to spread, even as investigators started having doubts.

"We completely believed from day one that (the death of Gliniewicz) was a homicide," he said. "Our intention was never to mislead the public."

The last call

Gliniewicz was under increasing levels of stress from scrutiny into what the investigators found to be criminal activity, Filenko said.

The veteran officer had planned to retire in August, but he was asked to stay on for another month.

The last radio call of his more than 30 years on the job was anything but routine. It would signal the beginning of a mystery that stumped investigators for a time.

On the morning of September 1, the lieutenant sent word over his radio at 7:52 that he was pursuing a trio on foot. Three minutes later, he requested backup. Radio communication dropped off. Colleagues would not hear Gliniewicz's voice again.

The backups arrived about 8 a.m. and a few minutes later found Gliniewicz dead. His body was roughly 50 yards from his cruiser, police said.

Three people who appeared in a surveillance video near the crime scene were cleared of suspicion.

The shooting


Gliniewicz was wearing a bulletproof vest at the time he was shot, according to two law enforcement officials briefed on the investigation. One of the officials said two shots hit Gliniewicz -- one stopped by his bulletproof vest, and another entered his torso at a downward angle.

The officer's .40-caliber pistol was found at the scene. A source involved in the investigation told CNN in September that Gliniewicz's gun was fired, but it wasn't clear who pulled the trigger.

Lake County officials said the case was being handled as a homicide, but other theories remained on the table during the investigation, including the possibility of a self-inflicted fatal gunshot wound.

The coroner said he couldn't rule out a homicide, suicide or accident.

A massive manhunt was launched in the aftermath.

More than 400 law enforcement officers raked through the heavy woods near Fox Lake on foot, all-terrain vehicles and horseback.

The FBI, U.S. marshals and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also helped in the hunt as well as police from adjoining areas. But eventually they pulled out, saying no suspects or persons of interest had been identified.
CNN
 
Police union leader makes cryptic threat against Quintin Tarantino.

Jim Pasco, executive director of the largest U.S. police union, offered the creepy statement Thursday to The Hollywood Reporter, vowing to get back at the "Pulp Fiction" director for comments decrying police brutality at a rally last month.
Pasco wouldn't give details, but promised the union will "be opportunistic" with the surprise some time before the premiere of Tarantino's new film, "The Hateful Eight."

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/563b...tion=entertainment&ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000024
 
Louisiana Police Dramatically Walk Back Explanation for Shooting Death of First-Grader

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New details and an explicit disavowal of the initial explanation suddenly make the fatal shooting of six-year-old Jeremy Mardis look like the result of disastrous recklessness by local police, if not something worse.

Two days after six-year-old Jeremy Mardis was fatally shot, and just a day after the shooting was attributed to marshals, and the boy’s father accused of backing his car into pursuers, Louisiana police have disavowed that entire story, reports The Guardian.

On Thursday, Colonel Michael Edmonson, head of the Louisiana state police, denied earlier reports that Few had been reversing his car toward the officers, who then had to defend themselves. “No. I didn’t say that,” he told the Guardian. “That didn’t come from me.”

At a press conference, Edmonson initially described the shooting as “an exchange of gunfire”, but later clarified that only the officers had shot, and that investigators had found no gun in Few’s car. Officials had previously declined to confirm whether officer gunfire was responsible for Mardis’s death.​

Another revelation: the city’s marshal, Floyd Voinche, and his officers have been accused of routinely “overstepping their authority” by Marksville’s mayor, John Lemoine.

“I don’t know why he felt the need to start patrolling in city limits,” Lemoine said Thursday of Voinche. “It makes no sense to me.”​

According to the report (you should read the whole thing), the investigation so far does not seem to support the story that Few was backing his vehicle towards or into officers. The positioning of the three police cruisers on the scene and the spray of glass from the passenger window indicate Few’s car was perpendicular to the officers, and their shots “hit the driver’s side broadside.”

Edmonson also said video footage of the incident does exist, but that investigators have not reviewed it. He added that the officers involved – there are four – had so far refused to speak with state police investigators. Police have not released the names of the involved officers.

Asked by the Guardian what reason they offered for their silence, Edmonson said: “You’d have to ask them. We are trying to talk with them.”​

Worst of all—as if this thing can get much worse, holy ****—it’s not entirely clear that Few was approached by the authorities for any good reason. Few’s fiancee, Megan Dixon, said she and Few had bickered at a local pool hall. Sometime later, after Few had picked up his son, he pulled alongside Dixon at a stoplight and asked her to come with him.

“I wouldn’t do it,” she said. “I’m stubborn.”

Moments later, she said, as the cars pulled away from the light, she saw two marshals’ cars—marked in black and white—approaching from behind with their lights flashing. She looked into Few’s car as he pulled away, and he was pointing at his son’s head, indicating that he was in the car and he wasn’t sure what to do.​

The reason for Few’s uncertainty? He was reportedly afraid of the marshals “because he and one of the marshals on the scene had a prior personal conflict.”

http://gawker.com/report-louisiana-police-dramatically-walk-back-explana-1740921296

Pretty freaking shady
 
Judge Allegedly Asked FBI Agent to Spy on His Family, Offered to Pay in Beer

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A judge in North Carolina’s Wayne County Superior Court is accused of abusing his power by asking a known FBI agent to snoop on his family members’ text messages. Judge Arnold Ogden Jones offered the agent two cases of beer in exchange for a disk full of texts, according to the federal indictment against him.

According to the indictment, Judge Jones asked the agent to obtain all text messages between two specific numbers, indicating that the messages would be “just for him” and that they “involved family.”

“I want down low — see what you can do without drawing attention,” the judge allegedly specified.

When it came time to talk payment, the indictment alleges, Jones was adamant that he couldn’t let the agent spy on his family’s texts “as a favor,” so the two agreed on “a couple cases of beer” as payment. They later changed the price to $100 in cash, which Jones allegedly handed over in exchange for a disk “represented to contain” the texts he want.

It’s not clear whether the FBI agent, who is not named, actually engaged in the warrantless surveillance, just that he told Jones he had gone through with it. It’s also not clear who the targets of the spying were supposed to be.

It is clear, however, that Jones is in a ****load of trouble. Ars Technica reports he has been placed on administrative leave and charged with three felonies, including bribing a public official. He faces 37 years in prison.

Jones was elected as a judge in 2008 and was entering the final year of an 8-year-term.

http://gawker.com/judge-allegedly-asked-fbi-agent-to-spy-on-his-family-o-1740866041

I can't believe this guy thought he could get away with this
 
Death of Fox Lake, Illinois, officer a 'carefully staged suicide'

This officer staged his suicide to look like a murder when it was becoming evident he was skimming from a police fund meant to help young people who wanted to become police officers.

CNN

An addition to this is an innocent man was almost arrested in connection with the faked emergency call from this cop.

More details also have come up including committing a murder, several reprimands and an all around really bad police officer by anyone's standards.

How he remained on the force for 30 years is astonishing, and disappointing.

The police officer who investigators say staged his suicide after embezzling funds from a youth program and may have been plotting a murder, had a personnel file with several reprimands -- fleshing out the portrait of a disgraced Fox Lake, Illinois, cop many had considered a hero.

And now, authorities are looking at Lt. Joe Gliniewicz's wife and son to determine whether they were involved in the thefts, three law enforcement sources told CNN.

Gliniewicz's file shows at least five suspensions, 10 violations of department rules and procedures, and accounts of three notable incidents -- including one in which he threatened a colleague and another in which he was found passed out in the driver's seat of his personal vehicle, "with the engine running full throttle with his foot on the gas." In the third case, commanders accused him of leaving a crime scene unattended, according to the documents.

Gliniewicz killed himself September 1 after radioing dispatchers that he was chasing three men and later radioing for backup, according to investigators.

Although authorities initially thought he'd been gunned down by the fleeing suspects, they later concluded he killed himself after stealing thousands of dollars from the Police Explorer post he helped run.

Investigators also say Gliniewicz discussed meeting with a gang member, possibly to arrange killing the village administrator in Fox Lake, with whom he said he had clashed over the Explorer program and its assets.

He also had an "arrestable" amount of cocaine in an unmarked evidence bag in his office. In a text message, Gliniewicz had discussed planting evidence on Village Administrator Anne Marrin, according to investigators -- leading to speculation the cocaine might have been for that purpose. Investigators never found evidence to back that theory, however.

In a news conference Thursday night, Marrin called the allegations "unsettling," saying she had never fought with Gliniewicz or even had harsh words with him.

"Even though these threats were made months ago, I take these threats very seriously," she said.

Shooting theory undone by bank records, texts

Although community leaders and members of Gliniewicz's own Explorer post lauded him in the days following his death -- at that point thought to be a possible homicide -- the police investigation has since shown that Gliniewicz stole thousands of dollars from the Explorers Post, an organization for youths interested in law enforcement, authorities said.

Text messages -- deleted by Gliniewicz, but meticulously recovered by police over several weeks -- and bank records confirmed the embezzlement, according to George Filenko, commander of the Lake County Major Crimes Task Force.

The police department sponsored the group, and Gliniewicz was the leader. Investigators said he used the money to pay his mortgage, access to adult websites, travel and other expenses.

Death of Fox Lake cop divides Illinois village

On Thursday, a law enforcement source told CNN that Gliniewicz discussed using funds from the Explorer account in text messages with his wife and son.

In one text message, Gliniewicz wrote that he "used the exploder account" -- an apparent reference to the Explorer Post's bank account -- to pay for a $624 airline flight. In another, he wrote: "You are borrowing from that 'other' account, when you get back youll have to start dumping money into that account or you will be visiting me in JAIL!!"

Shortly before his death, Marrin said she asked for an inventory of equipment owned by the Explorers. He didn't provide it by the deadline she had said, and killed himself the day she reiterated her request, according to officials.

"This village administrator hates me and the explorer program. This situation right here would give her the means to CRUCIFY ME if it were discovered," he said in an undated text message asking one of the people identified by investigators as family members to begin making payments into the account "very soon."

No one else has been charged in connection with the funds. An attorney for the family declined comment when reached by CNN.

Suspensions, reprimands

While the embezzlement allegations and revelations involving the village administrator are the most sensational, personnel records show Gliniewicz had several lesser issues in his 30-year career with the department.

The file shows he was suspended three times between 1987 and 1999, once for an unspecified reason, once for failure to report for duty and once for a rules violation that resulted in damage to city property. He was again suspended in 2012 in a dispute over a police report and again in 2013 for being late.

The personnel file also includes notes involving at least 10 violations of departmental rules, including calling in sick when he wasn't, being late, not following proper procedures for prisoner movements and changing his administrative privileges in a records system to a higher level without authorization.

The file also details an incident in which another law enforcement official reported finding Gliniewicz passed out in the driver's seat of his truck, the engine revving, and was unable to wake him.

"This Deputy told me that this was not the first time that something like this has happened," an official wrote in a report on the incident.


In another incident, Gliniewicz made a threatening comment to a colleague that included the phrase, "faster than I could put three rounds of bullets in your chest."

He also left a crime scene unattended, according to the personnel file. "The risk of the destruction or altering of evidence or the entire crime scene is unacceptable and outrageous," an official wrote in the file.

The file also contains an unsigned, anonymous letter from members of the department complaining about Gliniewicz's behavior, including claims of sexual harassment and an "inappropriate sexual relationship" with a subordinate.

The file also includes many certificates for class completion as well as good reviews.

'I had nothing to do with it'


The final act of his career played out September 1, when Gliniewicz radioed that he was pursuing a trio on foot.

He described three possible suspects.

"I'm out near the old concrete plant checking out two male white, a male black," Gliniewicz radioed, according to CNN affiliate WLS.

Three minutes later, he requested backup. It was the last time anyone would hear from him.

Backup arrived minutes later and found him dead of what his autopsy would later reveal to be a gunshot wound to the chest.

A massive manhunt followed as 400 law enforcement officers scoured the woods looking for his killers.

That manhunt nearly snared Thomas Corso and his friends -- whom Corso said resembled the three men Gliniewicz described in his radio call.

"There was a great possibility that Lt. Gliniewicz may have driven by those three individuals on his way to that scene," Cmdr. Filenko told WLS at the time.

Corso said they were using the ATM at the time.

A few days later, authorities questioned Corso and his friends.

Investigators cleared the three after they presented receipts from a diner and witnesses confirmed seeing them there.

Corso said Thursday said he didn't even know about what had happened to Gliniewicz until someone told him a huge manhunt was underway. It's been stressful, he said.

"Oh absolutely, this is a big relief for me, when I got the news yesterday, it was a huge relief," he said.
CNN
 
Louisiana Police Dramatically Walk Back Explanation for Shooting Death of First-Grader

http://gawker.com/report-louisiana-police-dramatically-walk-back-explana-1740921296

Pretty freaking shady

They have been arrested.

Officers arrested in shooting death of 6-year-old boy in Louisiana

Two police officers have been arrested in the shooting death of a 6-year-old boy this week in Louisiana, authorities said.

Jeremy Mardis was hit by five bullets in the head and chest as the officers pursued his father's car Tuesday, according to CNN affiliate WAFB.

His father, Chris Few, is hospitalized.

"Jeremy Mardis, 6 years old; he didn't deserve to die like that," Louisiana State Police Col. Michael Edmonson said.

Officers Norris Greenhouse Jr. and Derrick Stafford were charged with second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder following the shooting in Marksville.

"We took some of the body cam footage. I'm not gonna talk about it, but I'm gonna tell you this -- it is the most disturbing thing I've seen and I will leave it at that," Edmonson said Friday night.

Few was not armed, the affiliate reported. It's unclear what led to the pursuit.

Marksville is about 90 miles from Baton Rouge, the state capital.
CNN
 
So sad that child died because of those officers, glad to see they will face justice for it
 
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