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Abuse of Power Thread (Cops, Governments, Etc.)

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Police Officer Suspended After Tasering Unarmed 61-Year-Old Black Woman

Can't link to vid due to language. Search YouTube for: 093014 Incident

Tallahassee police have placed officer Terry Mahan on paid administrative leave after video of him tasering unarmed 61-year-old Viola Young raised "enough concerns," Tallahassee Police Chief Michael DeLeo announced late Wednesday night. "They just tased a lady for nothing," the man heard in the video says. "They wonder why they're hated."

Young's tasering followed a swath of arrests made by police early Tuesday evening. Police Chief DeLeo told reporters that officers were patrolling the area where Young was tasered and three others were arrested as part of the department's "Community Oriented Policing and Problem Solving Squad," dispatched in response to complaints about open-air drug sales in the neighborhood. The video taken by a witness was released by police Wednesday night.

According to court documents obtained by the Tallahassee Democrat, officer Mahan first approached Quontarrious Jones, 23—who was walking in the street depicted in the video that has no visible sidewalk—ordering him to stop walking. Mahan arrested Jones on a resisting without violence charge.

While Jones was being arrested, Laguna Young, 41, and Quaneshia Rivers, 20, started shouting at officers—both were arrested by police on the same charge. (Young was also arrested for probation violation.)

After the arrests by police, Young approached officers, with court documents reporting her asking, "I just want to know what is going on." Mahan apparently responded by informing her she was under arrest, and after she attempted to walk away, fired a Taser into her back, causing her to fall to the ground.

"Viola Young caused me to take my focus off of one of the arrestees and engage her," Mahan wrote in a probable-cause affidavit to explain his decision to taser the woman. "Young's actions obstructed officers while in the course of completing their legal duties."

This is another strike against the Tallahassee Police Department for officers' use of violence in arrests. From the Tallahassee Democrat:

The incident was the latest to raise questions about TPD's use-of-force tactics. Earlier this month, Tallahassee city commissioners voted to settle a federal lawsuit for $475,000 brought by Christina West, a Tallahassee woman who suffered broken bones and other injuries during her DUI arrest in August 2013.

In that case, which was also caught on video, West alleged her civil rights had been violated and excessive force used during her arrest, which happened after she crashed her SUV into an unoccupied home. Four officers were suspended and one, Chris Ormerod, was later fired, though TPD said it was over unrelated traffic crashes.

The West case led to the ouster of TPD Chief Dennis Jones. DeLeo, hired late last year, has since been trying to repair the Police Department's relationship with the community. TPD also changed its use-of-force protocols, calling for officers to "de-escalate" encounters with citizens or suspects.


"My gut reaction is sort of like everyone else's—it looks like an instrument that is used to deter violence is being used as a weapon," Young's lawyer, Robert A. "Gus" Harper III, told the Democrat. "I think that goes against the spirit of the whole concept of tasers."

http://www.tallahassee.com/story/ne...iddle-of-the-night-press-conference/16519959/

Pretty screwed up
 
Secret Service Agent Leaked Obama Info to Romney Campaign

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http://www.insidesources.com/is-exclusive-secret-service-agent-leaked-presidents-campaign-stops/

Is it just me or does it seem like the secret service does not like Obama?
At this rate the Secret Service might need their own thread for abuse of intelligence. How many stupid and careless ways can they screw up this week?
 
NYPD Shot and Killed an Unarmed Man, Then Claimed He Was Stabbed

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On Monday night, NYPD officers shot and killed two men, Francisco Carvajal and Rafael Laureano, in a Brooklyn apartment. Carvajal had broken into his ex-girlfriend's home and was threatening her and her children with a knife; Laureano was attempting to intervene and was accidentally hit with a police bullet.

The city's medical examiner pronounced a bullet wound to the back as Laureano's cause of death today, and NYPD spokesman Stephen Davis confirmed the finding to the New York Times. But the police, the Times notes, "initially said that Mr. Laureano was stabbed before officers arrived and that he died from those wounds." Laureano's autopsy, however, revealed no stab wounds.

The Times gives a timeline of the incident:

The chaotic scene began a little before 7 p.m., when Mr. Carvajal, 47, came to the apartment of his former girlfriend, Kathy Russo. At first she barred his entry, Mr. Davis said, and called her friend, Mr. Laureano, 52, who came to the apartment.

When Mr. Carvajal returned, she opened the door to tell him to leave, but he pulled out a knife and pushed his way in, Mr. Davis said. He said that Mr. Carvajal and Mr. Laureano grappled as Ms. Russo, 35, locked herself and her children in a bathroom.

At some point, Mr. Laureano fled. In the hallway, he met police officers — a sergeant and four patrol officers — responding to 911 calls of a woman being attacked with a knife.

Inside, Ms. Russo could be heard screaming as Mr. Carvajal hacked at the bathroom door, broke through one panel and reached inside. Ms. Russo knocked the knife from his hand, Mr. Davis said, and used it to cut his arm and chest. But Mr. Carvajal had a second knife, Mr. Davis said.


Then, the police arrived, breaking open the door with Laureano's help, the Wall Street Journal reports, and Laureano followed them into the apartment. (Laureano, Carvajal, and Russo were all reportedly bodybuilders.) Officers attempted to restrain Laureano, but he made his way past them, toward Carvajal, and was hit with one of the dozen-plus bullets that officers fired at the knife-toting attacker.

In a New York Daily News report published the night of the attack, police sources presented conflicting accounts. One high-ranking cop said it was unclear whether Laureano had been stabbed, and another officer said he was "sliced," and that there was "blood all over."

The falsehood about the stabbing may have been an honest mistake—there likely was blood everywhere, as Russo managed to cut Carvajal with his own knife—but that would mean that officers believed that Laureano—who was reportedly feeling well enough to help them bust down a door—had been stabbed before they even arrived.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/02/n...-shot-man-who-intervened-in-a-fight.html?_r=0

Why not just be honest from the start? Would go a long way if we didn't have to second guess everything they say
 
If it were any other paper I'd be side-eying the police and their motives, but given that this was the NY Daily News...I'm inclined to side eye the paper. Their sources were probably cops who had heard that a knife was involved and assumed it was a stabbing. And then the paper probably distorted and exaggerated their statements. Remember, this is the paper that claimed there were 22 deaths in the Boston Marathon Bombing (iirc): it flat out makes stuff up.
 
John Oliver on One BS Way Police Can Legally Steal Your Stuff

Can't link to vid due to link but search YouTube for: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: Civil Forfeiture (HBO)

In this segment from the most recent Last Week Tonight, John Oliver is pissed that the police have a legal mechanism by which they can seize your money for essentially no reason, and then use it for whatever they want, with virtually no limitations.

Since 9/11, civil asset forfeiture has been exploited to the tune of 2.5 billion dollars in 62,000 seizures—and that's just the cash. The procedure can also be used in a civil court case against anything you own, as long as law enforcement suspects it has been—or could be—used in a crime.

You don't have to actually be charged with anything, because that would make too much sense, but you do have the burden of proving your possessions are innocent.

Which is not to say that civil asset forfeiture is pointless and terrible—it's been used to seize drugs from cartels and return stolen property to its owners—just that its low standard of evidence makes it really easy for cops to abuse. (And Oliver doesn't get into this, but it's a lot more likely to be used against you if you're black.)

But what, you ask, would be their incentive for doing so? Pure, spiteful bullying? Nope! "The problem is," Oliver explains, "that many police departments are allowed to keep most, or all, of the money they seize."

Oh.

Also in this Last Week Tonight segment: Security tape of police raiding a Detroit art museum's monthly "funk night" and a guest appearance by Jeff Goldblum. The new Daily Show has really hit its stride.

This is a huge bunch of BS and I brought it up a few pages back. Basically all these cops just steal citizens crap and there is almost no way for you to get it back
 
This is not very new but it is definitely a recurring problem. It was in fact such a problem that a county or city (I forget exactly which) in Texas was caught abusing this to confiscate cars, money and other personal belongings from people, mostly those who were either black or hispanic.

This kind of abuse should be countered when there is evidence the police knowingly and deceptively used it to their own ends.
 
NYPD Caught on Video Pistol-Whipping Teen With Hands Up

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NYPD Officers Tyrane Isaac and David Afanador are under criminal investigation after allegedly beating and pistol-whipping an unarmed teen in Brooklyn, as seen in the brutal video below. Kahreem Tribble, 16, had his hands up at the time of the attack.

The two officers were pursuing Tribble after he allegedly dropped a bag of weed and began running at 1311 St. John's Place in Crown Heights. When the clip begins, Tribble gives up the chase, turning to face Isaac, and Isaac gives him a right hook to the head. Tribble puts his hands in the air, then Afandor arrives, gun drawn, and smacks him in the face with it. By this point, the teen is slumped over against a wall, but Isaac throws another punch just in case. Officer Christopher Mastoros then enters the frame, but does nothing to stop the wanton violence.

According to DNAinfo, which published the video, Tribble was left with cracked teeth and bruises. Afanador was suspended from his position without pay, and Isaac was stripped of his badge and his gun and placed on modified duty. The men, both nine-year veterans, are under investigation from the NYPD's internal affairs bureau and the Brooklyn District Attorney's office. Each has two previous cases against him claiming false arrest or excessive use of force, DNAinfo reports.

Vid at the link:

http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141007/bed-stuy/video-nypd-officer-hits-teen-face-with-his-gun

That is sickening, all for a bit of weed? What a bunch of BS
 
UPDATE: Ga. Cops Who Blew Off Toddler's Face With Grenade Won't Be Charged

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Late Monday afternoon, a Habersham County, Ga. grand jury announced that no charges will be filed against the Georgia law enforcement officers who threw a stun grenade into a crib, severely disfiguring a nineteen-month-old boy's face, during a botched drug raid in May.

From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

Nineteen-month-old Bounkham "Bou Bou" Phonesavanh's nose was detached from his face after a stun grenade landed in his playpen during the raid, carried out by a Habersham SWAT team in May. According to an incident report obtained from the Habersham sheriff's office, deputies were told to anticipate a cache of weapons and armed guards at the home.

No drugs or weapons were found in the home, and the suspect, Wanis Thonetheva, was arrested later at another house, with only a small amount of methamphetamine in his possession.


Habersham County has refused to pay for Phonesavanh's medical care, saying in August that "it would be in violation of the law for it to do so."

http://www.ajc.com/news/news/breaking-news/no-charges-for-officers-in-botched-drug-raid-that-/nhc2N/

This is so much BS, how the hell are they not responsible for that child's healthcare for there idiotic mistake?
 
Hundreds of NYC Pay Phones Have Been Tracking You for Months

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Titan, a company that controls the ad space on 5,000 phone booths around New York City, quietly installed bluetooth beacons capable of automatically tracking and serving ads to nearby smartphones on hundreds of its Manhattan booths, BuzzFeed reported early this morning. Now, in the wake of BuzzFeed's report, City Hall has asked that the devices be removed.

The devices, manufactured by a company called Gimbal, were approved by the city's Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT), but no notice was given to the public before their installation. From BuzzFeed:

New York City residents had no say in the deployment of Titan's beacons. Titan notified DoITT of its plans to install the beacons in 2013, which the city agreed to without a formal approval process because, according to [DoITT spokesman Nicholas] Sbordone, the company said it was using the devices for maintenance purposes only. Titan installed the beacons from September to November 2013; a source with knowledge of the situation alerted BuzzFeed News to the program anonymously for fear, the source said, of being fired for speaking publicly.

According to DoITT's spokesman, roughly 500 of the devices were installed, and BuzzFeed discovered several in "central and lower Manhattan" using a beacon-finding Android app. This morning, Phil Walzak, a spokesman for New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, said that the city has asked Titan to remove the beacons, and that they will be taken down "over the coming days."

They may be coming down from Manhattan's phone booths, but beacons are still used to serve location-specific ads elsewhere, and it's easy to imagine how they might have eventually been employed. Walking past Macy's? Here's information about a sale—come on in! The U.S. Tennis Association recently used the technology in New York at the U.S. Open, and BuzzFeed notes that Major League Baseball and Gamestop have used Gimbal beacons in stadiums and stores.

Before the removal announcement, Titan told BuzzFeed that the beacons were being used solely for "test purposes," and Walzak, the mayor's spokesman, emphasized in his statement that they are "incapable of receiving or collecting any personally identifiable information." It's true that Gimbal doesn't track things like names, phone numbers, and text messages, but it does openly collect and store location information, as well as data about your phone itself, and in some cases, app usage and browser history. For now, the company requires apps to obtain your approval before collecting and sending data, but if you're worried, the best way to hide from beacons is to turn off bluetooth.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/josephberns...devices-hidden-inside-new-york-city-ph#nnr5xt

Well that's not creepy at all
 
Hammond police sued over smashed windows, use of Taser during traffic stop


http://wgntv.com/2014/10/07/hammond...hed-windows-use-of-taser-during-traffic-stop/

Hammond police have been hit with a lawsuit claiming officers went too far during a traffic stop caught on cellphone video.

The confrontation happened Sept. 24..

The driver of a car was pulled over for not wearing a seat belt.

Video shows the driver and the front-seat passenger arguing with officers as police ordered them to get out of the car.

Officers then smashed the passenger side window and Tasered the passenger.

The plaintiffs say children in the back seat of the car were hurt by flying glass.
 
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People want to act all badass when they have their video cameras turned on then get upset / shocked when they get arrested.
 
Video cameras are the only defense the public has against police abuse.

No wonder some cops want to treat the recording of police activity like a criminal offense.
 
Man In Drug-Free Home Killed By SWAT Team On Drug Raid

Deputies shot and killed a man inside his Georgia home last month following an apparently bogus tip they received from a confessed meth addict and thief.

East Dublin resident David Hooks, 59, was killed because, according to Laurens County Sheriff Bill Harrell, he aggressively brandished a gun at the SWAT team that broke in his back door. But Mitchell Shook, a lawyer for Hooks' widow, contends that the sheriff has misled the public about the shooting and raid, which turned up no drugs.

The sheriff's office obtained a search warrant based on a tip from a thief who claimed he had found 20 grams of methamphetamine inside a bag he stole from a vehicle at Hooks' home, Georgia station WMAZ reports. According to the warrant, Rodney Garrett claimed that he thought the bag was filled with cash but that he later discovered it contained meth. Garrett said that he then turned himself into the sheriff's office because the drugs made him fear for his safety.

Garrett, a known drug abuser, also stole a second vehicle, a SUV, from the Hooks home.

The word of a thief shouldn't have been enough to obtain the warrant, Shook told the Macon Telegraph.

He also disputes assertions that the sheriff's office has made about Hooks' killing.

Sheriff's deputies raided the home without identifying themselves, Shook said, contrary to their claims that they told Hooks they were officers with a search warrant. The sheriff's office had also said they fired at Hooks for aggressively pointing a gun at them near the back door, but Shook alleges that the deputies blindly shot at Hooks through a wall without knowing who was there.

When Hooks' wife saw men in dark clothing heading for their home at 11 p.m. on Sept. 24, she woke up her husband and told him that the thieves who had stolen their SUV were back. Hooks grabbed a gun and headed to the door, according to Shook.

Deputies shot more than 16 times, Shook said in a statement.

Authorities searched Hooks' home for 44 hours, but found no drugs, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Hooks' family says that he didn't use drugs or sell them. They say he ran a successful construction company.

The Laurens County Sheriff's Office and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, which reviews all officer shootings, didn't respond to HuffPost's inquiries. Calls to Shook were not answered either.

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/5949318?utm_hp_ref=tw

Lets go raid someone's house at 11 PM in full tactical gear because of something a lying thieving meth addict told us...what could go wrong?:facepalm:
 
On the bright side at least they didn't blow off a babies face this time
 
Feds Stole a Woman's Identity and Made a Fake Facebook Page for Her

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Search "Sondra Price" on Facebook and you'll find a profile for the woman shown above. From the information that's publicly displayed, you'll learn a few things about her: She went to Watertown High School, she drives a BMW, her nickname is "Sosa," and judging by one picture, she might have young children.

All of this is true—the children in the photo are her son and niece, it turns out—but she didn't create the Facebook page—a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent named Timothy Sinnigen did. Sondra Arniquett was arrested in 2010 for a minor role in a cocaine-dealing ring (she went by Sondra Prince at the time). Ultimately, she was sentenced to probation, BuzzFeed reports, and without her knowledge, Sinnigen used photos and information taken from her seized cell phone to set up the profile in hopes of luring in other offenders. Now, Arniquett is suing Sinnigen, and government attorneys are claiming that the identity theft was permissible. From BuzzFeed:

The DEA's actions might never have come to light if Arquiett, now 28, hadn't sued Sinnigen, accusing him in federal district court in Syracuse, New York, of violating her privacy and placing her in danger.

In a court filing, a U.S. attorney acknowledges that, unbeknownst to Arquiett, Sinnigen created the fake Facebook account, posed as her, posted photos, sent a friend request to a fugitive, accepted other friend requests, and used the account "for a legitimate law enforcement purpose."


The U.S. Attorney defending Sinnigen claims that the agent's actions were OK: while Arquiett did not give "express permission" for Sinnigen to use the photos, it is argued, she "implicitly consented by granting access to the information stored in her cell phone and by consenting to the use of that information to aid in an ongoing criminal investigations." To which Anita L. Allen, a University of Pennsylvania law professor interviewed by BuzzFeed, replied: "I may allow someone to come into my home and search, but that doesn't mean they can take the photos from my coffee table and post them online."

Astonishingly, four years later, the fake profile is still up. One photo, of Arniquett "wearing either a two-piece bathing suit or a bra and underwear," was at some point pulled down—Sinnigen's government lawyer argues that the photo was not sexually suggestive—but the picture of her young son and niece remains.

Arniquett's five-year probation sentence for the drug arrest was terminated in March.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/chrishamby/...al-agents-can-impersonate-woman-online#nnr5xt

WTF? How the hell can they try and claim that this is freaking legal?!
 
Hammond police sued over smashed windows, use of Taser during traffic stop


http://wgntv.com/2014/10/07/hammond...hed-windows-use-of-taser-during-traffic-stop/

Hammond police have been hit with a lawsuit claiming officers went too far during a traffic stop caught on cellphone video.

The confrontation happened Sept. 24..

More details here.

An Indiana family is suing a city and the local police after officers allegedly smashed a car window to stun and arrest a passenger during a traffic stop.

The family said police pulled them over because the two front passengers were not wearing a seat belt on September 24 in Hammond, Indiana.

Both sides argued they feared for their safety during the traffic stop, which was videotaped by a teenager in the car.

The video in question

"I'm scared for my life," Lisa Mahone's voice is heard in a video, speaking from the driver's seat of her car. In the passenger seat, her partner, Jamal Jones, talks to officers gathered outside his door. His window is rolled down only a few inches. "I don't know what's going on," he says.

Joseph Ivy, 14, and Janiya Ivy, 7, are in the back seat. One of them holds a camera and is recording the exchange.

"Are you going to open the door?" an officer asks Jones.

"How can you say they are not going to hurt you? People are getting shot by the police!" Mahone says before her voice breaks into screams as an officer smashes the passenger window. Jones joins her screams as his body convulses from the electric shock of the stun gun. Officers then pull him out of the car, handcuff him and take him away.

Fear on both sides

Minutes before the incident, the family was driving to the hospital to visit Mahone's dying mother.

Hammond Police Officers Patrick Vicari and Charles Turner stopped Mahone because neither she nor Jones wore seat belts, according to Hammond Police spokesman Lt. Richard Hoyda.

The officers placed spike strips under the car's wheels and approached Mahone.

Mahone "informed the officers that her mother was dying and that (they) were on the way to the hospital to see her before she died," read the complaint. "Rather than issuing Lisa (Mahone) a ticket for failure to wear a seat belt, the officers demanded that Jamal (Jones), the passenger, provide the officers with his identification as well."

But Jones didn't have an identification. He had previously turned over his license for an unrelated citation. "Jamal offered to show the officers the ticket, which had his information on it but the officers refused," read the complaint.

Police however tell a different story.

Call to 911

Jones refused to identify himself and repeatedly ignored requests to step out of the car after officers feared he had a weapon, Hoyda said.

"The first officer saw the passenger inside the vehicle drop his left hand behind the center console inside of the vehicle. Fearing for officer safety, the first officer ordered the passenger to show his hands and then repeatedly asked him to exit the vehicle," Hoyda said.

Meanwhile, Mahone was on the phone with a 911 operator requesting to speak to a supervisor.

'Fear for their safety'

Mahone, Jones and the children "were in reasonable fear for their safety," read the complaint. "After a minute or two for no reason, the officers drew their weapons."

At this point Mahone is heard pleading with someone in the video. "He (Jones) is looking for his information in his book bag. When he goes into his book bag, they pull a gun out. What was the purpose of a gun? And now they ask me to open my door so I can get out. I'm scared. If you can pull out a gun in front of ... there is two kids in the back seat."

Both the Police Department and Hammond are standing by the officers.

"Police officers who make legal traffic stops are allowed to ask passengers inside of a stopped vehicle for identification and to request that they exit a stopped vehicle for the officer's safety without a requirement of reasonable suspicion," Hoyda said.

Hammond Mayor Thomas M. McDermott Jr. cited two recent police officer deaths in Indiana as the reason for heightened precautions.

"While I hope that situations like this one can be avoided in the future, I am standing solidly behind the actions of these police officers," McDermott said.

Mahone was cited for failure to wear a seat belt and a license plate reciprocity violation. Jones was arrested for failure to aid an officer, resisting law enforcement and was also cited for a seat belt violation, according to Hoyda.

Lawsuit

In a lawsuit filed this week in the Northern District Court of Indiana, Mahone, Jones and the two children accuse the city, Vicari, Turner and "other unknown officers" of excessive force, false arrest and imprisonment, assault and battery, and Intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Hammond Police directly all media inquiries to the law firm Eichhorn & Eichhorn, LLP. CNN called the firm and asked whether they were representing Hammond Police regarding the September incident. An unidentified woman said "that's true and we have no comment."

CNN attempted to contact Turner and Vicari, but was unsuccessful.

Using Taser on an 8-year-old? Mom sues police, city

Who recorded the incident?

"That incident further magnifies what took place in Ferguson, the use of excess force that seems to be happening across the breath and width of this nation," said NAACP Board Member John Gaskin. "As a man of color, if I'm pulled over, I will be leery of the officer and obey whatever commands they are giving me because at this point you are fearful of your life"

It was fear that led one of the children in the back seat, Joseph, 14, to begin recording the incident.

"The kids and the family had seen all the news of officers engaging in excessive force and were concerned for their safety," family attorney Dana Kurtz told CNN affiliate WLS.

The children were "horrified," said Kurtz. "They received glass shattered into the back seat, they had cuts in their arms. Not only were they harmed physically but they were harmed emotionally as well."

"They were scared. Their perception of officers, of police officers who were supposed to be serving and protecting not only them, but us, everyone, has been tarnished for the rest of their lives," said Kurtz.

Florida officer on paid leave after using Taser on 61-year-old woman

'Open dialogue'

A sentiment that judging by the recent events in Ferguson, Missouri, is echoed by many. The August fatal shooting of Michael Brown in that city led to days of violent protests in Ferguson.

"Just because the police could do it, doesn't mean they should. My question here is the judgment that they used smashing that window with the kid in the car and four passengers in that car if there could have been another way to get around that," said CNN law enforcement analyst, Tom Fuentes

The mayor said he acknowledged "the importance of being sensitive to differing points of views, amongst our diverse community, in regards to actions taken by our police department."

"As always, I will continue to encourage open dialogue on this and any issue that may affect relations between city government and members of our community," he said.

However, he concluded, he believes "when drivers get pulled over, whether they agree with the reason for the stop or they don't, you must comply with lawful requests of the police."
CNN
 
NYPD Interrupts Birthday Party to Steal Cash, Pepper-Spray Celebrants

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Just after midnight on September 16, several NYPD officers interrupted a group of friends celebrating Lamard Joye's 35th birthday near a basketball court in Coney Island. A video of the confrontation appears to show one NYPD officer removing more than $1,000 from Joye's pockets. When Joye objects, the officer sprays him with what witnesses claim was pepper spray. Later, the same officer sprays Joye's sister after she asks for his name and badge number.

"One of the most disturbing things about the video is the other cops standing around watching and doing nothing to stop the wrongdoing," Robert Marinelli, a lawyer representing Joye and his sister, Lateefah Joye, said, according to the New York Daily News.

Marinelli told reporters that Joye removed the nearly $1,300 in cash from his bank earlier that night to celebrate his birthday with his wife. Joye earned the money from his job as a construction worker, according to Marinelli.

"I believe that this officer made an assumption that any money Mr. Joye possessed was obtained illegally and therefore he would not report the theft," Marinelli said, according to the New York Times. "This assumption was wrong. Mr. Joye is a hardworking taxpayer. An incident like this would never occur in a more affluent section of the city."

As of Wednesday evening, Joye still hasn't had his money returned to him and no reason for its seizure had been provided, according to Marinelli.

The NYPD released a statement about the confrontation, claiming it was "precipitated by a call of a man with a gun" and noting that the department's Internal Affairs unit and the Civilian Complaint Review Board are both investigating. Kenneth P. Thompson, Brooklyn's district attorney, told the New York Times that his office is "aware of the alleged incident and it is being actively and thoroughly investigated."

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/09/n...html?partner=socialflow&smid=tw-nytmetro&_r=1

Vid at the link. It's pretty insane that they think they can pull crap like this and get away with it. Makes you wonder how often the officer did something like this without it being reported
 
NYPD Officer Knocks Teenager Out for Smoking a Cigarette

Can't link to vid due to language. Search YT for: Cop knocks out Brooklyn teen

The family of a Brooklyn teenager is suing the NYPD, claiming an officer knocked their son out and gave him brain damage after mistaking his cigarette for marijuana.

Seventeen-year-old Marcel Hamer was reportedly walking home from school smoking a cigarette when a plainclothes officer stopped him, apparently suspecting the cigarette contained marijuana.

The stop turned into a physical confrontation, partially captured on film. Hamer's family says, in their civil suit, that the officer struck Hamer so hard he passed out. In the video, Hamer appears to be unconscious, and the teen says he's suffered headaches, dizziness and memory loss. According to Brooklyn Paper:

The moment of the apparent knockout blow is partially obscured in the footage, but the officer appears to punch Hamer in the face with his left hand, prompting protests from Hamer's friends.

Hamer was eventually charged with—and pleaded guilty to—disorderly conduct. The NYPD told reporters Internal Affairs is investigating the matter.

http://brooklynpaper.com/stories/37/41/dtg-police-beats-teen-2014-10-10-bk_37_41.html

The NYPD strikes again
 
No one's talking about the kid shot in ST Louis 16 times cause the cops thought his sandwich was a weapon?
 
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