It’s stunning when you think about the fact that our tax dollars are taken from us whether we like it or not. New and ingenious ways are found to tax us into poverty, yet no matter how much they take from us under the guise of taxation, they use the money they take from us to hire more of these pirates and extortionists to take more. They get away with it because of ignorance and brainwashing; far too many people believe the lie that they are hiring more police for their protection. Ironically, the more cops they hire, the more crime we have.(mb)
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When city governments spend more money than they take in, officials often search for ways to generate revenue. One increasingly common source of money is traffic tickets. And research shows police officers issue more traffic tickets when cities are financially in a deficit. But police represent only one aspect of this revenue-generating system. Judges and their courts also use traffic citations to generate money for the cities that employ them. As scholars of public finance, we study how cities raise money to pay for their operations. Our new research indicates that judges in cities facing red ink often use their positions to maximize revenue from traffic tickets. They can do this by adding financial penalties to unpaid tickets. Judges often use the extra penalties to encourage people to pay. The process of generating dollars through traffic tickets, though, begins with the police.
Revenue-motivated policing
Traffic violations are common. Whether drivers fail to signal a turn or drive a few miles per hour above the speed limit, it is not difficult for police to find someone who violated a traffic law. Officers have the discretion to pick and choose when to ticket and can adjust the number of tickets they issue based on factors that are not related to whether someone broke the law. Those factors include the race of the driver or the racial makeup of the neighborhood the officers are patrolling. Usually, this means African American drivers and drivers in neighborhoods with more African American residents are ticketed at higher rates than other people. Another factor affecting ticketing, but unrelated to whether drivers are breaking traffic laws, is the budgetary situation of the city. One high-profile example of how a city’s use of traffic tickets can be a problem is Ferguson, Missouri. According to a 2015 Department of Justice report, “Ferguson’s law enforcement practices are shaped by the city’s focus on revenue rather than by public safety needs.” And those practices affected African Americans disproportionately. According to that report, African Americans made up 67% of the city’s population at the time, but they were the subjects of 85% of traffic stops, 90% of the tickets, 92% of the warrants police issued and 96% of the arrests. Ferguson was neither the first nor the only local government to replenish its coffers through traffic tickets. In the years since that federal report, numerous studies have shown that police and other city personnel increase the volume of traffic tickets they issue based on budgetary need.
San Francisco police officers check drivers at a sobriety checkpoint on Dec. 26, 2004. Justin Sullivan/Getty Image
In some cases, the court that will process traffic tickets is operated by the state; in others, it is operated by the municipality. Regardless, the court is responsible for collecting money from traffic tickets. But which court hears the case matters quite a bit. If a traffic ticket is settled in a state court, the money from fees is divided across the state and its various local governments. But if that same ticket is settled in a municipal court, then the vast majority of the money goes to the city. Our research examined how this difference affected traffic tickets in Indiana. Like prior research, we found that police from cities facing revenue shortages issued more tickets. But we showed that this only happened when cities ran their own municipal courts. Put another way, the police are only more likely to ticket when it is profitable for the cities they serve. We also examined how judges use their power to collect more money. Ferguson once again provides an example of how authorities can abuse this power. As detailed in the Justice Department report, judges did not consider a person’s financial status when levying penalties or setting payment deadlines. They also aggressively applied optional fees for late payments. Lastly, judges and police officers provided incorrect or incomplete information about when or whether defendants were required to appear in court. That meant defendants often racked up additional fees – and sometimes arrest warrants – for failure to appear. Our research explored whether the problems in Ferguson happened elsewhere. We studied Indiana, where judges can suspend defendants’ driver’s licenses if they have not paid their fines. This is a powerful, but potentially harmful, way to coerce payment. We counted the number of days judges waited before suspending a driver’s license. Then, we looked at whether the city was experiencing a revenue shortfall. We found that judges suspend licenses faster when their cities need more money. The effect was pretty large: A 1% decrease in revenue caused licenses to be suspended three days faster. Indiana’s property tax system places limits on the amount of revenue cities can collect through property taxes, and cities do not discover how much of their property tax levy they will be able to collect until after the city budget process is complete. This system allowed us to compare cities facing different levels of revenue shortfalls due to state-imposed reductions in property tax revenues.
In some cities and states, officials operate their courts – not just the police department – to generate revenue. We believe this is inherently a problem. The criminal justice system should exist to maximize public safety, not revenue. But if states change the rules about who keeps the money generated by traffic tickets and related fines, the incentives for revenue maximization go away. Our research bears this out. Judges will have no reason to suspend licenses faster when their cities are facing a budget crunch if the revenue goes to the state. This change won’t fix everything. Racial bias in the criminal justice system will still be pervasive. But it could help get rid of policing — and judging — for profit.
This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. The Conversation has a variety of fascinating free newsletters.
These are the kinds of cases Philidelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner’s office has investigated and brought to trial. The types of cases that past District Attorneys would cover up because of their unethical close relationship with police and their unions, which prevents them from doing their job impartially. These kinds of cases have caused cops, their unions, and Republicans to continue to try to remove DA Krasner, a former public defender, from office. The marginalized communities in Philadelphia do understand the importance of having this District Attorney in office.(mb)
»»»> Former Philadelphia police officer Patrick Heron was arrested last year over what CBS News Philadelphia described as “a long list of charges related to unlawful sexual contact with a person less than 13 years of age, photography depicting sex acts with young girls and retaliation and harassment against victims and witnesses.” This week, the same outlet reported he was back in court, with prosecutors alleging that Heron had recorded some 30 sexual assaults in the back of his police cruiser.
The case itself is disturbing. It started last September when the retired Philadelphia police officer was arrested after prosecutors said an investigation turned up “disturbing images and threatening messages against the alleged victims.” Due to the nature of the alleged crimes, the district attorney didn’t release many details at the time but asked anyone with more information to come forward as they believed there were more victims than they already knew about
At the time Heron was arraigned, his bail was reportedly set at $111 million.
As of this week, prosecutors say they have identified a total of 48 victims, 44 of which are still unidentified. Thirty assaults were reportedly recorded in the back of his police car over a span of 13 months and some of the victims were children he met through his own child. Prosecutors requested that all of the cases filed against Heron be consolidated going forward, which the judge reportedly granted.
With so many unidentified victims, investigators ask anyone with more information to come forward.
IU learned of the September 2022 arrest of Moses Baryoh Jr. when notified of a federal civil rights lawsuit he filed in U.S. District Court June 9, according to a university statement released Wednesday.
Attached was nearly 10 hours of camera footage from body and police car cameras that show what happened the night two white officers confronted Baryoh, who is Black
The officers went looking for Baryoh after he left IU’s student recreation center at 8:47 p.m. without paying the $3 parking lot fee. He had cash, and they just take credit and debit cards. Officers Austin Magness and Charlotte Watts found him in his apartment complex parking lot.
“What’s up, buddy? Can you come and chat with me real fast?” Magness says, telling Baryoh to take a seat on the curb. “Can ya’ll tell me what this is about?” Baryoh responds, refusing to sit down. Magness tells him to put his hands behind his back, then locks handcuffs around his wrists.
“Can I please know why? Can I please know why? Can I please know why?” Baryoh asks over and over. The officers don’t answer. Magness tells him, “You could have made it a lot easier.
Baryoh, wearing just gym shorts and tennis shoes, gets placed in the backseat of an IUPD squad car. He admits having a bag of marijuana in his pocket, and hands it over. Magness pulls a Miranda advisement of rights card from his wallet and reads Baryoh his Constitutional rights.
It’s then the officer tells Baryoh why police came after him. “You have been identified as someone who left the SRSC without paying.”
Magness tells Baryoh he was confrontational when he refused to sit on the curb. “I tried to back up because I was scared,” Baryoh says. He tells Magness that he’s sorry.
“I’m not trying to hurt you, regardless of what the media says,” Magness responds. “This could have all been avoided.”
The officers drove him to jail, where Baryoh waited nearly an hour sitting shirtless and handcuffed on a bench in the police car entryway. “I by no means think you’re a bad person,” Magness says. “You made a poor choice.
“It is with regret that we share that members of our Indiana University Bloomington Police Department failed to apply IU’s high standards for pursuing and arrest,” said the statement, which offered an apology to Baryoh and the community.
“We are deeply saddened by the behavior and actions that took place.”
IU settled the lawsuit Sept. 5; details are confidential and not available. The settlement came a week after word got out that Lees was no longer employed by IUPD. Lees could not be reached for comment.
Jill Lees, former chief of police for the Indiana University Police Department, at her swearing in ceremony in 2019.
Baryoh accused IUPD officers Magness and Watts of unreasonable search and seizure, use of excessive force, false arrest and assault. He sued both officers, IU and the IU Board of Trustees.
IU’s statement said Lees made the wrong decision when she upheld the officers’ actions. “An initial and standard department review of the arrest conducted in October 2022 by the former IUPD police chief concluded no wrongdoing had occurred and no subsequent action was undertaken.”
Preliminary charges sought against Baryoh — theft, resisting arrest and possession of marijuana — were dismissed.
When Magness went to the parking lot after the attendant and his supervisor called police, one of the people heard on the video says, “This is a lot of ridiculousness for $3 … wasting a lot of people’s time.”
IU investigation into incident
After the lawsuit was filed, IU officials reviewed “all associated behaviors, processes, and procedures,” the statement said, and “determined that the former IU police chief did not follow mandatory review protocols during the initial 2022 review.”
It was then “IU determined that IUPD policies were indeed violated during this incident” and imposed sanctions on those involved. Lees was either terminated or she resigned. The Herald-Times has filed a public records request seeking details.
The statement said, “all responsible parties within IUPD have received disciplinary action,” but did not elaborate. The H‑T filed a request seeking details about those sanctions as well and has not received a response from IU.
Changes implemented
IU listed steps taken in addition to discipline against Lees and the officers:
Hiring an outside consultant to review the police department in Bloomington and other IU campuses “to assess policies, procedures, practices, cultural norms and leadership.”
Enhanced training on “fair and impartial policing, procedural compliance, and field operations.”
Implementing changes “to university processes such as parking enforcement, to ensure reasonable responses in the future.”
Maintaining an open dialogue to ensure that “IUPD operates at the highest ethical standards aligned with IU’s core values.”
The statement said IU “holds our staff, faculty, and leadership to the highest standards of ethical conduct and integrity, including IUPD.”
Letter calls leaders ‘incompetent’
In a related matter, an anonymous letter has been sent to police officers and others seeking a “vote of no confidence” in the public safety leadership team that oversees all IU campus police departments.
The letter features photos of Benjamin Hunter, IU’s associate vice president for public safety; Steve Adams, IU’s senior director for public safety; and Brad Seifers, IUPD’s deputy superintendent and the father-in-law of Austin Magness, whose actions were targeted in the lawsuit. Seifers has been appointed interim IUPD chief on the Bloomington campus to replace Lees
A letter sent this week to police officers and others connected to IUPD
The letter claims a toxic work environment at IUPD and calls the three public safety leaders “incompetent, unprofessional and untrustworthy.” It asks recipients to register their concerns on the back of the letter, then send it to the IU trustees in a pre-addressed and stamped envelope that was enclosed.
After Minneapolis cop Derek Chauvin and his cohorts lynched George Floyd, calls to defund the police were loud and clear across the country. Those calls were just then as they are just now, but contrary to what many people tell themselves, the United States is not a democratic nation where the government is responsive to the people’s demands. So the corporate media, wholly owned and controlled by the powerful one percent, went into overdrive to sell the right-wing Republican talking point that defunding the police state is tantamount to supporting criminals. Democrats, too, cleaved to the Republican perspective out of fear of being branded anti-police. But I hardly speak of the Democratic party because of its weakness. Republicans set a far-right agenda; Democrats create a lite version. I have always harkened to the old Jamaican sayings; as I got older, they became more and more meaningful. In this case, I will refer to two of them, ‘the devil finds work for idle hands, and’ too many cooks spoil the broth.’ There are far too many police officers in the United States, largely because the wealthy one percent who own the corporate media want it that way. Consequently, the middle class, which has been socialized into believing that more and more police are necessary for their safety, is always willing to be taxed to pay for more and more cops to protect the interest of the super-rich.
Disney owns ABC. Paramount Entertainment owns CBS. NBC is a division of COMCAST, and So is MSNBC. FOX is owned by the super-wealthy Rupert Murdoch. Warner Brothers owns CNN. Jeff Bezos owns the Washington Post, and Bezos owns the marketing behemoth Amazon. We can go down the list of major opinion influencers, and the result is the same: they are all owned by the wealthiest and most powerful people, including social media sites. In the greater scheme of things, your individual rights are of little significance, particularly when the courts are asked to adjudicate individual rights against those of the state or powerful interests. In those scenarios, individual rights are lost most of the time. The majority of Americans, including African Americans who have suffered under the yolk of police oppression for hundreds of years, still believe the police are their protectors.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that police have no specific obligation to protect. In its 1989 decision in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services, the justices ruled that a social services department had no duty to protect a young boy from his abusive father. In 2005’sCastle Rock v. Gonzales, a woman sued the police for failing to protect her from her husband after he violated a restraining order and abducted and killed their three children. Justices said the police had no such duty. Most recently, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit upheld a lower court ruling that police could not be held liable for failing to protect students in the 2018 shooting that claimed 17 lives at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Almost to a man, every last one of those parents most likely harbored the belief in what they characterize as their police department: that they are supposed to be protected by the police. That their police department that they fund will protect their children in their classrooms. It is a sure bet to imagine that every single one of those parents who are salaried receives their paycheck after the government removes taxes that pay for services such as funding the police. Those who operate businesses also must pay taxes, and even those who do not work also pay some kind of tax, including sales tax that goes to funding police and other services. Yet, according to the judiciary, even though citizens do not have the opportunity to opt out of funding the bloated police state, they have no right to protection from it.
So, if the police have no duty to protect citizens, what is their role? As I intimated earlier, they are there to protect property and to extract revenue from the masses. I read an article years ago in which the author opined that if Americans were smart enough to calculate just how much taxes they pay as opposed to how little they receive from it, there would be another war of independence. The vast majority of the just under one million cops from the almost 18,000 departments that police the 320 million of us are out pulling over and ticketing motorists for whatever they choose to lie about. I always warned my boys to avoid having to pay what I called stupid tax: traffic offenses. These days, it is impossible to avoid that tax; it isn’t a stupid tax anymore. Cops simply make up a lie on the ticket, and even if a judge sees through the lie and dismisses the ticket, you are still stuck with court costs. The need to generate revenue is so great that cops will do anything to gin up arrests to fill jail cells in furtherance of the prison industrial complex. Some municipalities depend on traffic ticket revenue to fund large parts of their budget. So when the police see no traffic infraction, they invent them. Usually, the poorest people are forced to bear the brunt of this insidious corruption.
It is for those reasons that cops in Mississippi arrested a 10-year-old Black boy who was arrested and placed in a cell for relieving himself in a parking lot. Quantavious Eason was detained and taken to a police station in Senatobia after an officer spotted him urinating behind a car outside a law office last month while his mother was getting advice on housing issues. LaToya Eason questioned if her son’s race influenced officers’ decision to take him away in a police car and place him in a cell for almost an hour. “Would you have put a white child in a cage? If it had been a white child, he probably wouldn’t have even been stopped,” she told a news conference this week. She said the boy had seen a sign saying there were no toilets for public use inside the law office, but he desperately needed to go. Read the full story here. https://news.yahoo.com/family-demand-mississippi-cops-fired-150011272.html
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
On Tuesday, it was announced that Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw will resign from her position later this month. Outlaw, who became the first Black woman to helm the department, held the position for three years. Her tenure started just before the pandemic which was followed by the Black Lives Matter protests. During the 2020 protests, the Philadelphia city council issued a statement saying that the police response to protestors with rubber bullets and tear gas were “brutal” and “unacceptable.” The city issued a $9.25 million settlement to hundreds of participants stemming from police conduct, though at first Outlaw defended the actions of authorities
Last year, two female former officers who filed a gender discrimination and sexual harassment lawsuit against Outlaw and the city won a $1 million verdict. The women claimed that they suffered a hostile work environment that included being placed in certain jobs as retaliation after they made complaints sexual harassment complaints. Kenney has confirmed that First Deputy John M. Stanford Jr. as interim police commissioner.
Gregory Meriweather, a former mayoral candidate, was visiting friends near the 4500 block of Woodland Drive during the standoff between Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers and a man with a machete.
Meriweather, who has almost 7,000 followers on Facebook, livestreamed the standoff and subsequent shooting.
“I wanted to be in the position of protecting that individual, but also to let law enforcement know there was someone on the scene monitoring what they were doing,” said Meriweather, whose videos had been watched more than 10,000 times as of Monday afternoon.
The man killed was identified as Kendall Darnell Gilbert, 40, by the Marion County Coroner’s Office.
Officers were dispatched to the home at about 6:45 p.m. Sunday to check the welfare of a woman. The woman pushed an emergency alert button and said someone was trying to kill her, said Lt. Shane Foley, a spokesperson for the police department.
Officers were familiar with the people involved as police had been at the home multiple times over the weekend for mental-health related calls, Foley said.
Videos show confrontation
Meriweather’s Facebook videos showed Gilbert standing near a mailbox at the end of a driveway in the neighborhood on the city’s northwest side. Gilbert was holding a machete, sometimes pointing it at and threatening officers, while also holding a large stick in portions of the videos, which are nearly two hours long.
The videos show negotiators trying to speak with Gilbert and an armored vehicle arriving. Toward the end of the video, several loud bangs and what appears to be a taser deploying are heard before gunshots ring out. Gilbert then falls to the ground near a police vehicle. Paramedics began treating Gilbert. He died at a hospital, according to police.
Meriweather previously worked as a community initiatives strategist under former IMPD Chief Bryan Roach.
“I didn’t see a reason for this to end bad,” Meriweather said. “I didn’t see a reason for him to end up with a bullet in him.”
He believes officers could have let Gilbert tire himself out or used tear gas to subdue him.
“There is no doubt the death of Mr. Gilbert is a tragedy,” IMPD said in a statement. “For 48 hours, IMPD Officers worked to peacefully resolve the situation, deploying less-lethal tactics and a psychologist with the Crisis Negotiation Unit was on-scene. Despite those measures, Mr. Gilbert moved towards officers with a machete in-hand. At that point, officers discharged their weapons.”
No officers or other residents were hurt. The officer who discharged his firearm is a 28-year veteran of the department and has been placed on administrative leave, Foley said, which is standard protocol during an officer-involved shooting.
Mental health cost man his life, neighbor says
Donald Clark, who has lived a few doors down from where the shooting happened for the past 25 years, said it’s clear his neighbor was suffering from serious mental health problems.
“It goes back to the lack of institutions and help for people with mental health conditions,” Clark said. “It’s just so sad. Someone lost their life because of mental illness.”
Meriweather said he wants to hear from the city’s leadership. Sunday’s shooting came just days after police released an edited video showing another man, Gary Harrell, being shot in the back while running from Officer Douglas Correll with a revolver in his hand. There is no indication Harrell pointed the weapon at the officer as he fled before the Aug. 3 shooting.
“Leaders lead when situations like this happen,” Meriweather said. “The mayor of this city and the chief of this city should not be quiet with the amount of footage shown and the end result (in Sunday’s shooting). When you are a leader of the general public this is not the time to be quiet. The people of this city deserve to hear from both of them.”
IndyStar sought comment from Mayor Joe Hogsett, who’s running for reelection, and Police Chief Randal Taylor but received only written statements from their respective offices.
Mayor Hogsett’s office points to expanded resources
“Our thoughts go out to all involved in yesterday’s incident,” reads a statement from the city. “Over the past several years, the City of Indianapolis has greatly expanded the number of emergency mental health resources to those who need them.”
The city included information about its Mobile Crisis Assistance Teams (MCAT), which operate from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the week and include a clinician and a police officer.
Clinician-Led Community Response Teams, including a clinician and a peer specialist, also are active in the downtown district from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven days per week. Hogsett’s proposed 2024 budget includes an expansion of the clinician-led teams to the city’s east district. As the teams reach budgeted staffing, they will shift to 24-hour operations, according to the city’s statement.
Residents, the statement said, also can get mental health and substance abuse intervention at the Assessment and Intervention Center, which is located on the Community Justice Campus
Police officers in Ohio shot and killed a 21-year-old Black pregnant woman, who was also the mother of 6‑year-old and 3‑year-old sons, outside a Kroger store on Thursday. The police allege the woman stole liquor from the store and claim she tried to drive over an officer who got in front of her car. The woman, Ta’Kiya Young of Columbus, Ohio, was six months pregnant and set to give birth in November. Young’s shooting death is currently being investigated by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, and the officers responsible for it are currently on paid administrative leave, Blendon Township police Chief John Belford confirmed. The police department is expected to release body camera footage of the incident this week.
Young’s death comes after several disturbing videos collected from body camera footage showed Los Angeles-based cops brutalizing Black women, including one who was holding her baby when an officer appeared to punch her in the face, earlier this year. Earlier this month, a Black woman in Detroit sued the local police department for arresting and jailing her while she was eight months pregnant over a facial recognition error. Research from last year linked the ongoing threat of police violence to worsened maternal outcomes for pregnant Black women. Friends of Young’s described her to a local news station as “the life of the party” and “a ball of energy.” “Her personality is like second to none. So, she will truly be missed for her personality. I know her kids will miss her, that’s the saddest part of all of it,” one friend said. “I just wish something else could’ve been done to intervene with the situation.”
Someone near and dear to me texted me Thursday morning asking if I had watched the Republican Presidential debate. I responded that I did not care to watch a bunch of pathetic treason supporters. Treason? Yup!!! ‘Treason ’ is the crime of betraying one’s country, especially by attempting to kill the sovereign or overthrow the government. On January 6th, 2021, armed insurrectionists from different factions of the white supremacist ecosystem, with Donald J. Trump’s direct urging, attacked the US. Capital Building where Mike Pence, Trump’s own Vice President, was carrying out the academic task of certifying Joe Biden’s win, making him the 46th president of the United States. Most Americans until that time weren’t even aware that this mundane activity was part of the process of certifying the vote to seat a new American president. It was that way because the process was a ceremonial end to the long election battle preceding it. On that day, Mike Pence oversaw the processes as vice president, which the Constitution mandates. Pence had no power to act to stop the count or throw out ballots; he was there simply in a ceremonial capacity. But for his boss, the 45th occupant of the presidency, this was an attempt to use Mike Pence to thwart the will of the 81,283,098 Americans, or 51.3percent of the voters who cast their votes for Joe Biden… Donald J. Trump had tried every legal means through the courts to challenge and decertify Biden’s win all the way to the Supreme Court that he packed with his own floozies; it was all for naught. There was no election fraud. The only election fraud found was Republicans intimidating voters and voting numerous times for Trump. Having failed in the courts, Trump and his band of traitors attempted to use illegal means, fake electors, attempting to seize voting machines, slandering Dominion. a manufacturer of voting machines, slandering and threatening poll workers, Trump himself calling Georgia’s secretary of state and demanding that he manufacture11,780 votes to hand the state to him electorally.
Every aspect of the definition of ‘treason’ was satisfied on January 6th, 2021. Every single American with sight has seen some or all of what transpired that day. Every patriotic American should be repulsed by what they saw. This was bigger than politics. Whichever party engaged in such action against the country should be purged through the Justice system, the party disbanded, or both. Every single person representing the party of insurrection, treason, and totalitarianism saw what Trump and his acolytes did on January 6th, yet every single one of them raised their hand that they would support the nominee for president in 2024, even if that person is Donald J Trump. In most nations, the penalty for ‘treason’ ‚betraying one’s country, is death. In America, the world’s supposedly oldest democracy, the traitor is running for another four-year term to be president. I cannot think of a nation in which there is a rule of law that all of the people who orchestrated and participated in an event like January 6th, 2021, aren’t already tried, imprisoned, or executed… An ordinary American can hardly get a job with a misdemeanor charge pending against them, much less a felony. Many people have lost their jobs simply because they got arrested for some minor infraction. Yet a man with 91 felony charges pending, who has already been convicted of sexual assault charges, forced to close a fake University and a fake charity and pay back millions, is running to sit atop the federal bureaucracy. Half the country has no problem with it. Donald Trump is facing 91 felony charges and is the front-runner for president in the Republican treason party. Let that sink in. Not a single one of the morons standing up on that platform fielding softball questions from the anti-American propaganda machine FOX News would stand up for America. They all knew that what Trump and his cronies did was treason, but none was willing to defend America. This made them all complicit, but none more so than Mike Pence, who scurried away like a cornered rat into the bowels of the Capitol building as his boss’s thugs yelled hang Mike Pence and erected a gallows to string his cowardly ass up. Mike Pence is not a hero; he is a coward. Pence had zero constitutional authority to change the outcome of the 2020 vote. Trump merely wanted Pence to attempt to use his office to disrupt the process so he could point to him and say he did it. Even though the single-term, twice impeached traitor who faces 91 felony counts of criminal behavior did not feel he should be on stage with the other losers, they were a[ll] petrified of saying anything about him or the crimes he committed. While we are on that subject, Vladimir Putin responded to Yevgeny Prigozhin’s alleged passing in a plane crash by saying he was a great businessman. He sent condolences to Prigozhin’s family.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
They are committing these killings fully aware that cameras are everywhere, often even on their chests. They are so supremely confident that they will be protected because of the illicit doctrine of ‘qualified immunity’ imposed on the country by the illegitimate Supreme Court that they are not a bit worried about consequences, even for murder. The thing that should infuriate more citizens into action is not that the police departments are prepared to put out totally false narratives when their members murder innocent citizens but that public officials like Mayor Jim Kenney refuse to call out the blatant act of murder they see in the video with their own eyes. No public official should be allowed to hide behind the false veil of ongoing investigations to avoid condemning these blatant acts against innocent citizens. Nothing in a recording changes because someone speaks out against its content. No one should pay any attention to the police unions anymore; they are inconsequential criminal-supporting entities. (mb)
Officials announced Wednesday that a Philadelphia police officer who fatally shot a 27-year-old man last week will be fired for administrative violations. The announcement comes after police walked back their initial narrative about the fatal encounter, and the attorney representing the victim’s family released a video contradicting that account. Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said Wednesday she has decided to suspend Officer Mark Dial for 30 days with the intent to dismiss him. Dial is not being terminated for fatally shooting Eddie Irizarry on Aug. 14, but for violating department policy related to the refusal to obey orders from a superior officer and failure to coöperate in any departmental investigation, Outlaw said. Police initially said last Monday that Irizarry got out of his car after a brief car chase with a knife and lunged at officers prior to the fatal shooting. Two days later, Outlaw told reporters that body camera footage “made it very clear what we initially reported was not actually what happened.” On Tuesday, Irizarry family attorney Shaka Johnson released surveillance video of the incident, which showed an officer shooting into the driver’s side of Irizarry’s vehicle seconds after getting out of his police vehicle. Johnson, who also represented the family of Philadelphia police shooting victim Walter Wallace Jr., said he and the Irizarry family believe “there was an intentional misleading of the public.”
“What about what you just saw could ever be confused as he got out of the car and lunged at police officers?” Johnson asked at a news conference Tuesday. “Not a single thing. That was an out-and-out, flat-out lie.” When asked about Johnson’s comments, Outlaw said it’s “understandable” that there’s a lot of emotion involved in the situation, but she defended the department. “Once it was brought to our attention that that was misinformation that was put out there, we corrected it and we didn’t have to do that … We discovered it ourselves and did what we could in a timely manner to make sure that that narrative was quickly addressed,” she said.
Shaka Johnson, a lawyer who also represented the family of Philadelphia police shooting victim Walter Wallace, speaking a press conference at Philadelphia’s City Hall in 2020.
What does the video show?
Johnson said he and the family were able to obtain surveillance video of the incident, which shows an officer shooting into the driver’s side of Irizarry’s vehicle seconds after getting out of his police vehicle. Surveillance video released by Johnson shows Irizarry driving over orange traffic cones as he pulls into a parking spot. Seconds later a police vehicle pulls up next to his car. Two officers get out, draw their weapons and approach both sides of Irizarry’s car. The officers tell Irizarry to show them his hands as Irizarry appears to roll his window up. Then the officer on the driver’s side, later identified as Mark Dial, appears to fire his gun into the car multiple times. The officer runs back toward the patrol car and reports that shots have been fired. The officers then attempt to open the doors of Irizarry’s vehicle. The thing that should infuriate most citizens is not just that police departments put out totally false information when they murder
What did the police say about the shooting?
Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said she has decided to suspend Officer Mark Dial for 30 days with the intent to dismiss him.
Outlaw said last week two officers spotted a Toyota Corolla “driving erratically” and followed the vehicle until it drove the wrong way down a one-way street and parked. She said the officer who approached on the passenger side attempted to open the door and alerted the officer on the driver’s side that the man inside had a weapon. Outlaw said the man “turned towards” the officer on the driver’s side who then fired his weapon multiple times. The driver was transported to a local hospital and pronounced dead, she said. Two knives were found inside the vehicle, a kitchen-style knife and a serrated folding knife, according to Peter Marrero, a detective who is investigating the shooting. Officials said the initial narrative that was reported was called into police radio and the body camera footage later contradicted that account. Outlaw said Wednesday the source of the initial information is still under investigation and she’s “looking forward to finding out what the answer is.” Outlaw previously said police gave the public “the best information that we had available,” at the time. “I understand and want to acknowledge the hurt and confusion that family and community members can experience when details of investigations change, and especially when they change in a very public way,” Outlaw said last week.
‘We need answers,’ family member says
Irizarry’s family told the Philadelphia Inquirer he came to the city from Puerto Rico seven years ago and he did not speak or understand English. Outlaw told reporters last week she did not know if there was a language barrier between the officers and the driver. Johnson said Irizarry had no criminal record and struggled with schizophrenia. He said Irizarry, a mechanic, carried a pocket knife that he used for work. ”We need answers. Why?” Zoraida Garcia, Irizarry’s aunt, told the newspaper. “Why is this officer still at home? He murdered my nephew.”
When will body camera footage be released?
Body camera footage has not yet been released publicly, and Johnson told reporters Tuesday the family has not been able to view it. The authority to release the footage to the family or the public lies with the Office of District Attorney Larry Krasner, according to Ava Schwemler, director of communications in the city’s law department. Jane Roh, a spokesperson for the district attorney’s office, told USATODAY the office has been in contact repeatedly with the Irizarry family’s legal counsel and “intends to keep its sworn obligation to seek justice for all those involved in the fatal shooting of Mr. Irizarry, as well as for all those Philadelphians who are not directly involved but who care deeply about fairness, justice, and independence.” “We will have more to say about this situation when we can do so consistent with preserving the quality and integrity of our independent investigation,” she said in a statement.
Calls for officer to be fired, charged investigation ongoing
Outlaw said the investigation into the shooting itself and the inaccuracy of the initial account is ongoing. She said Dial may face additional disciplinary charges if he violated additional department policies. Outlaw again acknowledged the difficulty of regaining the public’s trust. She previously said her department is conducting a criminal investigation and working in parallel with the district attorney’s office. “Once we get a clearer picture. I will be able to say with certainty and make a determination whether or not they operated within policy of the department,” Outlaw said last week. Irizarry’s family and friends gathered on the street where he was killed Tuesday again demanding that Dial be charged and they be allowed to view the body camera footage, the Inquirer reported. The city’s Citizens Police Oversight Commission, an independent agency, said its members have been monitoring the investigation into the shooting and recommended the department terminate Dial. Anthony Erace, the commission’s interim executive director, told USATODAY this marked the first time the commission has recommended the firing of an officer in its nearly yearlong existence. He said the recommendation was made before he viewed the video released by Johnson and agreed it was a “fairly big step.” Erace said while the commission will be investigating the circumstances that led to the police department initially releasing incorrect information, he believes the department tried to be transparent quickly.
“There’s a difference between wrong and rotten, right?” he said. “If you’re asking me if I think it was a conspiracy to conceal information from the public, I don’t think that it was.” The oversight commission is hosting a virtual public meeting Wednesday night for “concerned community members.” At the city news conference Wednesday, Mayor Jim Kenney acknowledged that Philadelphia has gone through “rocky times” of unrest after the killings of Wallace and George Floyd in Minneapolis, but said the city is able to recover and move forward. “This is certainly a tragedy and my heart breaks for the family and for the loss of Mr. Irizarry,” he said. “Again, this is an ongoing investigation and I’m not going to have any comment or what I think or feel about what I’ve seen or know until this investigation is concluded.”
This incident of Cops investigating fellow cops after a complaint by a citizen ought to make you laugh. However, please don’t because it is serious. The title of this article ought to show you just how desperately corrupt and insane American Law enforcement is.(mb
The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office Internal Affairs is investigating a complaint against an officer who allegedly racially profiled a Black veteran during a traffic stop.
Investigators found that the officer’s behavior was inconsistent with the conduct expected of an officer but that he did not stop the Navy vet because of his race.
A review of the officer’s history revealed numerous community complaints, indicating a pattern of misconduct over the years. Still, very little punitive action was taken against the officer— and as a result, the veteran has secured a lawyer and thinking about suing the department.
US Navy Veteran Braxton Smith was detained, searched and questioned by Jacksonville police on Nov. 24, 2022. (Photo: Facebook/Braxton Smith)
JSO officer Justin Peppers was under scrutiny after pulling over Navy veteran Braxton Smith on Nov. 24, 2022. Smith alleged that Peppers engaged in bias-based policing, but his allegations were never substantiated. However, over his career, Peppers has received 14 complaints and has a history of infractions within JSO, according to sources.
On the night of the incident, Smith says Peppers used excessive force during their interaction, which included throwing the sailor to the ground, handcuffing him, performing an illegal search, and detaining him for half an hour.
Body-camera captured the incident.Smith was later released without charges only after task force members came to the scene of the stop to support Peppers.
During the 30 minutes, the disabled Florida veteran was asked about drugs and the legal firearm he had in the trunk of his car. He also threatened to charge Smith with felony fleeing.
“I was scared from beginning to end,” Smith said in an interview with News4JAX.
He also said he felt humiliated by the stop and what he believed was an illegal search.
“I’m a veteran, I went to college, and I’ve done things to shield myself from this type of stigma, but it’s still managed to follow me,” Smith said.
The internal investigation concluded that even though Peppers’ conduct was not acceptable, Smith was pulled over for a reason. A report on the incident said, “Officers established probable cause to search Smith’s vehicle based off observations of ‘shake’ inside of Smith’s vehicle and the odor of marijuana.”
Peppers and the task force were exonerated for stopping and restraining the Navyman.
“This was based on probable cause” and “all done within JSO policy and in good faith,” the report continued.
According to internal affairs, Peppers did not initiate the traffic stop because of Smith’s race. He stopped him because he believed his vehicle’s tint was too dark.
Where Peppers was wrong is in the banter that he had with Smith during the stop. Internal affairs reported Peppers used “profane language” while engaging with Smith.
After Smith said, “I’m a Black man in America, I’m terrified of the police.”
Peppers started calling the veteran “Mr. Black Man,”
The investigation also founder Peppers has committed “repeated infractions of unbecoming conduct,” stating evidence showed he was unable to refrain from the use of coarse language while policing.
The report cited the multiple citizen complaints filed against him dating back to the year 2017 as additional proof of such conduct. Between 2020 and 2022, he was the subject of 10 internal affairs investigations, according to LEO Ratings.
The outcome of the investigation resulted in Peppers being reassigned within the JSO.
Destinee Thompson was supposed to be on her way to lunch with her stepmother in August 2021 when Colorado police, mistaking her for a robbery suspect, fatally shot the pregnant mother as she fled in her minivan. Frustrated by the district attorney’s decision last year not to charge the officers, Thompson’s family filed a wrongful death and excessive force lawsuit on Tuesday against five officers from the Denver suburb of Arvada who were present when she was killed. “I want their badges,” said Francis Thompson, Destinee’s father. “She’s 5‑foot tall, seven months pregnant. … You’re a grown man and you’re threatened by that? You don’t deserve to be able to wear a badge.” They allege Destinee Thompson’s race — she’s part Hispanic and part Native American — played a role in her being targeted. Officers were looking for a suspect described as white or Hispanic. “If this was an affluent white person getting into her vehicle, they would never have stopped her,” said Siddhartha Rathod, an attorney representing her family.
In a statement Wednesday, the Arvada Police Department said the family’s lawyer had mischaracterized the events surrounding Thompson’s death, and the agency plans to mount a vigorous legal defense. Police spokesperson Dave Snelling said the officers were justified in using deadly force because they believed Thompson’s actions posed an imminent threat. The episode took place on Aug. 17, 2021, when officers responded to a report of a woman who had stolen from a Target and brandished a knife at an employee. A witness followed the suspect to a nearby motel, where police arrived. Thompson was leaving that same motel to meet her stepmother, according to the lawsuit, which was first reported by The Denver Post. While the description of the suspect included a white tank top — which Thompson was wearing — it also specified a chest tattoo, which Thompson did not have. Officers noted that she didn’t exactly match the description but decided to stop her to rule her out, according to the lawsuit. Thompson kept walking when police asked her to stop, told them she wasn’t the person they were looking for, and said she didn’t have an ID to show them. The police spokesperson said the officers had “reasonable suspicion” to believe Thompson may have been involved in the robbery and were therefore justified in contacting her.
Thompson’s family strongly disagrees. “She’s done nothing wrong … and she is confronted by these policemen and doesn’t want to talk to them,” Rathod said. “You have the right not to talk to police.” Thompson, sitting in her minivan and surrounded by five officers, locked the doors and refused to get out, repeating, “It wasn’t me,” the district attorney wrote in the 2022 letter explaining their decision not to charge the officers. One officer smashed the passenger window with a baton, and Thompson backed the car up, hitting a police vehicle parked behind her. She then drove forward over the curb and onto the road. One officer began shooting, according to the district attorney’s letter, because he believed another officer was struck by the car or being dragged under it, and eventually shot and killed Thompson. Her unborn child also died. Thompson’s family alleges the officer who fired could see that the other officer hadn’t been hit or dragged by the car. “Not a single one of the other officers thought it was necessary to shoot,” added Rathod in an interview. “This is a murder of a pregnant woman.” Snelling, the police spokesperson, said the department stands behind its officers’ actions. “Thompson unfortunately chose to engage in conduct that the officer reasonably believed posed an imminent threat to the life of another officer,” Snelling wrote. “He chose to use deadly force to stop that threat.”
Snelling added that the agency later discovered Thompson had warrants out for her arrest and the autopsy found illicit drugs in her system. Rathod and Francis Thompson dismissed the police mention of those warrants, saying it doesn’t justify the officers’ actions and that police at the scene didn’t know about her background during the interaction. “All they knew was this woman didn’t fit the description of the shoplifting suspect,” Rathod said. For Francis Thompson, who described his daughter as eager to help others and quick with a laugh, it feels like the police department is using Destinee’s past to justify her death. The grief hasn’t abated, he said. Every day there are moments when he cries, he said. “It’s hard for me to find a purpose in a lot of things anymore.”
‘You should be scared’: Ocala police officer fired after he allegedly stalked his ex-girlfriend…
A former Ocala police officer was arrested Wednesday, accused of stalking and threatening an ex-girlfriend. 27-year-old Natawi Chin has been charged by the Marion County Sheriff’s Office with aggravated stalking. According to an arrest report, the investigation began on July 31 with a complaint made to the Marion County Sheriff’s Office from an Ocala Police Department employee about an ongoing incident between the victim and Chin. According to an arrest report, Chin left a voicemail for the victim, who also worked in law enforcement, threatening to “shoot up” her house. The report says Chin repeatedly contacted the victim for months after they had broken up. Investigators received images of text messages between the victim and Chin, making it clear that he had been monitoring the victim’s home and activities. In one voicemail turned over to investigators, Chin allegedly acknowledged that he was leaving an audio message because he knew a text message would get him arrested.
According to the report, the victim replied via text message, “IDK if I should be laughing at what you said or be scared.” The report says Chin replied, “You should be scared.” According to the Ocala Police Department, Chin was hired as a recruit in October of 2020 and promoted to police officer in 2021. He was fired after his arrest Wednesday. In a statement announcing the arrest, the Ocala Police Department described the incident as “deeply unfortunate and disappointing.” “We want to emphasize that such behavior goes against the principles and values of our department,” the statement said. “We do not tolerate any criminal misconduct, especially from those who take an oath to protect and serve.” Not sure if I should laugh or cry about this absurd department response; they are veritable criminal empires.
Mississippi ‘goon squad’ officers are part of larger law enforcement problem, experts say…
Six former Mississippi police officers, some of whom reportedly calledthemselves the “Goon Squad,” pleaded guilty this month in a racist attack on Michael Jenkins and Eddie Parker, two Black men who endured hours of torture from the officers in January.
Authorities said the former Rankin County and Richland Police Department officers, all of whom are white, broke into the men’s home without a warrant, after a neighbor complained about the men staying at the home of a white woman, whom Parker knew and was taking care of.
While using racial slurs, the officers placed Jenkins and Parker under arrest and tased, shot at and sexually abused them for more than two hours, authorities said.
Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey said at a news conference on Aug. 3 that the police badge was “tarnished by the criminal acts of these few individuals.”
But experts say rogue groups like the Goon Squad are not an anomaly in the U.S.
“If you look hard, you’ll see other instances of [the officers] violating police department rules, the procedures, [and] the fact that they named their group shows some degree of organization,” Vida Johnson, a criminal defense attorney and associate law professor at Georgetown University Law Center, told Yahoo News. “I think the real problem is, just how many other groups are there like this?”
The rise of rogue groups
Clockwise from top left: former Rankin County sheriff’s deputies Hunter Elward, Christian Dedmon, Brett McAlpin, Jeffrey Middleton and Daniel Opdyke and former Richland police officer Joshua Hartfield, appearing in court in Brandon, Miss., Aug. 14. (Rogelio V. Solis/AP)
Over the past decade, more than 80,000 law enforcement officers across the country have been disciplined or investigated for misconduct, according to a 2019 investigation by USA Today.
In addition, “there’s a number of instances of police officers being members of white supremacist gangs or expressing white supremacist views,” Johnson said.
In 2006, the FBI warned that white supremacist groups were infiltrating police departments. According to Michael Chairman, a former special agent with the FBI and a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice, the formation of groups like the Goon Squad is not a rare occurrence.
“This has been a part of the fabric of law enforcement in the United States for some time,” Chairman told Yahoo News, and in fact it goes back to the history of policing during the Jim Crow era.
While it’s unclear exactly how many rogue groups — meaning police officers who act outside the scope of their responsibilities, typically by violating the law — exist, recent cases of such groups continue to come to the forefront.
“A lot of these rogue groups are actually officially created by the police department,” Chairman said. “So in Baltimore, you look at the gun crime task force that was involved in all kinds of criminal activity, including episodes of violence and drug dealing and theft of drugs.”
Most recently, in Memphis, the Street Crimes Operation to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods, or SCORPION, unit was accused of brutally beating and killing Tyre Nichols in January following a traffic stop, resulting in murder charges for five former officers who were involved.
Eddie Parker hugs a supporter prior to a hearing where the six former officers pleaded guilty to state charges for torturing him and Michael Jenkins in a racist assault. (Rogelio V. Solis/AP)
Experts say rogue groups are becoming increasingly prevalent and are a threat to democracy. “I think it’s absolutely one of the biggest crises in American life,” Johnson said.
“The idea that we have police officers who have this incredibly important role in our society of maintaining law and order, for them to be rogue and to hold beliefs that other members of our community are inferior to them, are inferior to others in our community, is an enormous problem in our society and our government,” she said.
But groups like these can be hard to investigate and shut down. “If you think about a tight-knit group of people, a tight-knit group of officers, who have sworn to cover each other’s back no matter what, then it’s almost [an] impossible nut to crack until somebody decides that they want to listen to the community that’s complaining,” David Thomas, a former police officer and professor of forensic studies at Florida Gulf Coast University, told Yahoo News.
As authorities combat the infiltration of rogue groups, some polls have shown a decline in Americans’ trust in law enforcement. In a 2020 Gallup poll 48% of Americans trusted the police, a 5‑point drop that occurred in the wake of the murder of George Floyd.
Earlier this year, a Washington Post-ABC News poll taken after Nichols’s death found that only 39% of Americans are “very” or “somewhat” confident that police are “adequately trained to use excessive force.”
“The greatest failure in law enforcement over history has been to learn from its past mistakes,” Thomas said. “Because if you look at our history, it continues to be cyclical and it just continues to happen over and over again.”
While Johnson acknowledges that these groups are hard to investigate, she says more needs to be done to address the problem at every stage of policing.
“In terms of how police officers are recruited, how police officers are vetted before they’re hired, there should be periodic reviews of their emails, their body-worn cameras, their text messages, their social media accounts, looking for racial and other types of slurs,” Johnson said. “Because ultimately, they are public servants and they’re supposed to represent all of us.”
Disabled veteran denied bathroom access laughed at by Dallas police after wetting himself…
Dallas police are looking into a complaint made by a man after he said he was denied restroom access by two off-duty officers working security in Deep Ellum, Star-Telegram media partner WFAA reported.
The man said in the complaint that he was left with a disability that requires him to have emergency access to restrooms after he was injured and underwent surgery on his lower body while serving in Afghanistan, Kuwait and Iraq as an Army sergeant, WFAA reported. After the off-duty officers denied him access to the bathroom at Serious Pizza in Deep Ellum on June 10, the man called 911 for assistance but urinated on himself before more officers arrived, according to the complaint.
When two on-duty officers arrived after the man had already left, wearing their body cameras, they made jokes about him, according to WFAA. Video from the body-camera footage played for the Community Police Oversight Board on Aug. 8 showed the two on-duty police officers arrive and start making fun of the man.
“Somebody called saying they just pissed themselves because of you two guys,” one of the officers said in the video, part of which was published by WFAA.
A second on-duty officer officer laughingly replied, saying, “You just made a guy pee himself?”
The video then shows officers laughing, one of them slapping his knee and asking, seemingly amused, if the man actually called 911 about the incident.
The second on-duty officer relayed some details from the call.
“He said you wouldn’t let him use the restroom, and then he called and said it’s OK, he doesn’t need to use the restroom anymore because he soiled himself,” she told them.
Dynell Lane, the Army veteran, told the Community Police Oversight Committee that he tried to use the bathroom at Serious Pizza in Deep Ellum at around 2 a.m. but was prohibited by the off-duty officers.
“The Dallas Police Department failed me,” Lane told the committee, according to WFAA. “They declined to assist me by not giving me the courtesy of checking my ID or medical documents. … I had to endure urine and bowel leakage while inside the restaurant. As a retired sergeant, I had higher expectations for the city. Please hear me when I ask for change so no one with a disability has to endure what I endured.”
The Ally Law in Texas requires that people with certain medical conditions be allowed access to restrooms, even if they aren’t public, if they can show they have a relevant medical disability. WFAA reported that Lane said he wasn’t given the opportunity to provide documentation of his disability.
After hearing the complaint at the oversight committee meeting, board member Jonathan Maples said, “That absolutely turned my stomach,” the Dallas Morning News reported. “It’s absolutely appalling to treat one of our veterans that way.”
The board voted to conduct an independent investigation, the Morning News reported.
Serious Pizza closed at 3 a.m. the day of the incident, according to its online hours of operation, and Lane arrived about 2 a.m. The restaurant told WFAA in a statement that it was “disappointed by the conduct of the officers involved in this incident, the extent to which we were not aware of until the bodycam footage was released (Wednesday.)”
Serious Pizza has requested that the off-duty officers who were contracted to work security for the restaurant that night not be assigned to its restaurant again.
“Their actions were not representative of how we treat our guests and the general public,” Serious Pizza said in the statement provided to WFAA. “Given that none of our employees were presented with any documentation indicating that Mr. Lane was disabled, we are disheartened that we didn’t have the opportunity to resolve the situation in real-time.”
Serious Pizza closes its bathrooms to the public while employees are in the process of closing the restaurant to protect its employees, it told WFAA. Restaurant management is now looking into ways the restroom policy can be revised to prevent a similar incident.
Dallas police spokesperson Kristin Lowman told WFAA that the department was looking into the complaint and that the internal affairs division would be conducting an administrative investigation.
‘This Is Totally Our Fault’: Missouri Police Department Apologizes for Hiring Cop Who Posted About Decapitating Black People Online…
A suburban Kansas City police department is now down by one new employee following the resurfacing of old social media posts that exposed his racially prejudiced beliefs. Officials in Pleasant Hill, Missouri, have apologized to the community for hiring a police officer without doing a thorough check of his social media.
Jacob Smith being sworn in as a Pleasant Hill police officer on Aug. 14, 2023. (Photo: Pleasant Hill Missouri Police Department/Facebook)
Former officer Jacob Smith relinquished his badge after the PHPD launched an investigation into several social media posts that did not reflect the city and those employed to represent the interest of the small town. According to the PHPD, Smith and another cadet were sworn in as officers during the City Council regular meeting held on Aug. 14. The following day, images of the two new officers were shared on the City of Pleasant Hill and Pleasant Hill Police Department’s social media profiles. One person saw the pictures and recognized Smith and brought to everyone’s attention old posts from Smith’s social media accounts. The posts, made only a month ago, were extremely offensive. While Smith posted some political memes, many of the posts were homophobic memes. The most disturbing was a post that referenced decapitating Black people. Authorities were shocked to learn that social media posts contained content that was racially insensitive, which contradicted the values upheld by the city, the police department, elected officials, the law enforcement profession, and the entire community, they said.
According to KansasCity.com, Smith was placed on paid leave immediately after the conclusion of the city council meeting. Subsequently, following an examination of the accusations, he was terminated at approximately 1 a.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 16. “There is no excuse for racism, insinuation of violence, or any form of hate in our community. Our hiring process failed to identify the social media posts of this individual prior to being hired and it was discovered after the fact, but still allowing the City the opportunity to take administrative action before this individual was released to full-duty,” the department said in a joint statement with Mayor John E.P. King and the Office of the City Administrator. The department shared that typically the hiring process includes “a social media background check evaluating rhetoric or conduct that is unbecoming of law enforcement officers,” but “unintentionally” overlooked that step with Smith’s process. “This is totally our fault. We traditionally do a very comprehensive background. This time we failed to do so,” Pleasant Hill Police Chief Tommy Wright said in an interview with FOX4. Within hours of being exposed, Smith was fired.
“It is an unfortunate truth that in my 30-plus years as a firefighter, I have seen how one employee can derail the trust and integrity of the best organizations. The police officers, sergeants, and leadership of the Pleasant Hill Police Department work hard every day to provide this community with the safety and protection at the highest level of service,” King said in a statement. “These officers are part of this community, and they want their police department to be the pride of this city,” the mayor continued. “Please do not let one individual detract from the work they have accomplished in the last few years to make the Pleasant Hill Police Department what it is today.”
No one should be taken in by the canned releases that are prewritten awaiting exposes like this. This feral hog will be hired by the next department down the road with a great salary.
Politics is a zero-sum game; we are good, you are bad — end of story. Nothing can be gained by saying that the other side is right on an issue. If they are right, why do you need us? Consequently, Politicians will only say something positive about someone from the opposite side after they are out of the game. For example, I heard an audio clip recently of former disgraced JLP Prime Minister Bruce Golding heaping praise upon Michael Manley. Bruce Golding is out of elective politics, and Michael Manley is long dead. As a quick side note, I credit Golding for praising Michael Manley for the good things he did. Of course, it will be a cold day in Hades before someone from Manley’s party have a kind syllable to say about a single Labor Party great. This has always been the character of that party; however, zero-sum in a zero-sum game-scorched earth, demagogue, deny, denigrate, destroy. https://mikebeckles.com/whack-a-mole-crime-strategy/
That said, I understand the statements of Peter Bunting, former Manchester MP and Minister of National Security, when he said that his party is fed up with the myriad of excuses the Andrew Holness administration has been providing in relation to fighting crime.“I am disappointed in the prime minister. “Whenever an incident like this occurs, he seeks to blame others.” Bunting is now a Senator in his party after he was booted from his once-safe Central Manchester seat. Senators in the Jamaican Parliamentary system are [not] elected to that body but appointed by their respective political parties. Bunting was touring a firebombed community in St Catherine with others, a ritual in Jamaican politics where politicians seek to derive leverage by showing up to pay faux homage and concern for crime victims as a means to curry favor and receive votes.
These visits are usually succeeded by grandiose speeches designed to show concern and care. Both political parties have mastered this art of deception.https://mikebeckles.com/adopt-my-anti-crime-strategy-and-watch-the-difference-bits-and-pieces-is-not-enough/ A great deal can be done to remediate the crime problem Jamaica faces. The Prime Minister said ‘there was an element in the society who do not want the Government to empower the police force to act pre-emptively, as he toured the same site on Monday. The fact that both sides agree on the seriousness of the problem but refuse to sit down together to work out solutions shows that neither side wants his issue remediated. Crime is a useful political football that both political parties are wont to let go of. It is something that affects people in personal and emotional ways. It is an issue that politicians have used for decades to play on the emotional chords of the Jamaican people with devastating effectiveness. They are not about to solve this issue. https://mikebeckles.com/349416 – 2/
“If the courts said that what they were doing is unconstitutional, then he must accept the ruling and find other creative ways to keep the Jamaican people safe.”Peter Bunting was speaking to the use of Zones of Specialized Operations ZOSOs and States of Emergencies SOEs and the wholesale use of those two strategies as a long-term crime eradication strategy. I agree and may have written a hundred articles decrying those strategies as a crime-busting solution. They simply aren’t. Some are linked in red.
Nevertheless, I am also curious to see what exactly the PNP has as a crime reduction strategy of its own. You know, outside of the usual tired and word strategy of placing unqualified lackeys and political hacks in positions of power as a reward for their support and patronage. Granted that both political parties play the same sorry game, my interest is in a different approach. If my recollection is correct, Peter Bunting, as the Minister of National Security, with his party in power, threw his hands up and declared that only divine intervention could save Jamaica from the criminals. If that statement weren’t so dangerous and asinine, it would be worthy of the comedy circuit. Divine intervention!!!! What reckless incompetence. Yahweh was the divine. But with every miracle he worked, the recipient had to do it themselves. When he turned water into wine, fill up the jars and close the door. When he healed the man born with a crooked arm, stretch forth your arm. When he healed the Leper, go show yourself to the Priest. When he healed the blind, go wash your eyes in the river. When he healed the bedridden, pick up your bed and walk. Even to the dead Lazarus, he called out Lazarus, come forth- even the dead Lazarus rose to his voice, yet supposed leaders in the twenty-first century are telling the people they are supposed to protect that they can only be saved by God. What a gross abdication of duty. No, Peter, we have heard this lame song and dance before.
Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
An interesting phenomenon has always occurred in Jamaica; around every four years, violent crimes tend to dip in numbers. The police high command is usually quick to take credit for the decreased murders, rapes, and woundings during these lulls but is eerily silent when the killings go up again. There are more lulls these days as the entire world is engrossed in the Olympics, World Cup Soccer, World Cup Female Soccer, and a range of National and International Athletic meet in which Jamaica participates and usually does very well. This year is no exception, and true to form, a senior member of the so-call high command of the police department sought to capitalize on the lull or slight decrease in violence by throwing out the same tired old talking points that blow up in their faces as soon as the gangsters decide to get back to doing what they do.
Deputy Commissioner of Police Fitz Bailey told local media, crime rates have decreased, with murders dropping from 891 to 786 over similar periods in consecutive years. The Police should be guarded about speaking about crime statics in the middle of the year with four months to go. Bailey also made some curious comments about the serious problem of attrition the force is experiencing, claiming that while the JCF seeks to recruit over 1,000 members annually, officers’ departures due to issues like remuneration, superiors’ treatment, and unsatisfactory work conditions have prompted concerns about attrition. Still, he is not very concerned about the numbers as he says the current force is yielding results. How could a senior manager make such a ludicrous statement and still retain his position? Lets us examine the numbers. The strength of the Jamaica Constabulary Force continued to increase; as of December 31, it had increased by 4.0 percent to 12,498, still 11.3 percent below the establishment size.”As the size of the force increased marginally, so has the size of the broader population, which makes the marginal increase in force size a wash.
Last year, 564 persons (452 males and 112 females) joined the force. This was 28 persons fewer than in 2021. At the same time, 336 officers left the force. So the force registered a net gain of 228 people. It is important to extrapolate from the data how the Jamaican people are benefitting from this or not. Of the 564 who signed up and were trained in 2021, 112 were women. I have seen deadwood male cops, and I have seen deadwood female cops. We can be politically correct, or we can take a really hard look at the data and come to concrete decisions on who we are signing up and calling police officers. Former Prime Minister Bruce Golding took flak for pointing to the fact that he is less inclined to see a lot of females signing up to be police officers because he did not believe they were fully capable of doing the job. The howls of sanctimonious outrage against Golding were deafening, as I am sure it will come at me, but who cares. The [reality] is that only a small percentage of women can actually perform at the level required to police Jamaica. Period!!!
“Whilst I do appreciate that terms and conditions of service, physical infrastructure, and work environment is also critical. People don’t necessarily leave the job because of that alone. People will come into the organization and leave in a few years.” DCP Fitz Bailey said.“ I don’t think our rate of attrition is higher than anywhere else. Young people generally don’t stay too long on one job, and I think we need to train and recruit people constantly. I would like to see the data that DCP Bailey is looking at to make the assertion that the attrition rate of the JCF is similar to other departments. Nurses, Firemen, Doctors, Teachers, Police Officers, and professionals of every other discipline must be trained to strengthen existing numbers as well as to replenish what already exists. It is easy for DCP Bailey to argue that he is not concerned because he is not paying to train those officers who are leaving in droves, as some more sane members of the force see it. The now Interdicted head of the Police Federation, Corporal Rohan James, told the media, “Persons are submitting resignations left, right, and center. It is right across the JCF. Even the specialized operations are being jolted,” he said. “There are a number of reasons why they are quitting. Some are leaving for greener pastures. Some are just tired of the crime, salary, lack of resources, the disrespect, you name it.” Another cop told a journalist, “If you see your colleagues go off on a long vacation, you really don’t expect to see them come back.”
The cost of training a single police officer is not as low as one might imagine. The taxpayers have to foot the bill for their training. I understand that there will be attrition, as DCP Bailey alluded. Nevertheless, making light of the astronomically high flight from the force is a strategy that is bound to fail. It is like trying to collect water in a leaking bucket. In a force of just over 12 000, to have 336 officers leave in a single year is no small thing. It is a massive problem that the supposed high command could attempt to remediate rather than try to paper over a rotting wall. (1) On the issue of superiors’ treatment, this can be remediated with policy that instantly makes it clear that being in a command position does not make you God, be disrespectful to a subordinate, and you are demoted. (2) unsatisfactory work conditions, the so-called high command can make it clear to the government that members of the rank and file will no longer work in the deplorable conditions that have obtained for decades. The High command must be able to be more than political lackeys and lapdogs for the country’s politicians. Grow a couple and stop being apologists for the failure of the two political parties. Having a halfway decent office and halfway decent salary for yourselves should not lull you into accepting the shit that the rank and file has been forced to accept. It is classic divide and conquer. But the high command has never been much more than people promoted above their capabilities.
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Mike Beckles is a former Police Detective, businessman, freelance writer, black achiever honoree, and creator of the blog mikebeckles.com.
On seeing the video of this incident, I immediately posted the following comment to one of my social media pages:
Police in the United States are unable to speak to Black people, young or old, when they are investigating without placing them in handcuffs.
On the other hand, they manage to do so with whites; they even manage to verbally engage white mass murderers and bring them in without bloodshed. Police officers do make mistakes like everyone else; that is not the issue here. Surely they recognized that this was a young child. A white kid of that age would not be handcuffed and placed in a patrol car, and there lies the issue. They can apologize all they want, but when the rubber meets the road, this is again another case of disrespect for the Black community that will not end until the Black community makes it stop.
The narrative they use is ‘officer safety’. Officer safety does not (trump)your constitutional right to be secure in your personal belongings and effects.
Officer safety does not (Trump) your right to the presumption of innocence.
How can 41 million people be so powerless in the face of this abuse?
How can 41 million people allow the government to tyrannically trample on their rights?
Tyranny, you say?
Yes, it was allegedly Thomas Jefferson who said it, not I. Tyranny is when the people are afraid of the government. Democracy is when the Government is afraid of the people.
The police know the psychological damage they are doing by placing handcuffs on your children.
The police have been the central organ of terror against Black people. They continue to be.(MB)
A TikTok video of Michigan police arresting a 12-year-old boy and putting him in handcuffs was an “unfortunate misunderstanding” that stemmed from the foot chase of a suspect wanted in a suspected vehicle theft. The video led to three statements by Mayor of Lansing Andy Schor and local police by late Friday afternoon. The video appears to show a young, Black male wearing neon yellow shorts and a white T‑shirt being detained by a police officer outside an apartment complex. A man tells officers they are traumatizing his son and the male was put into a police vehicle before later being released to the man who said he was the individual’s father. A video posted to TikTok account careyann372 has generated millions of views and posts throughout social media with users saying the boy was detained as he was throwing away garbage.The video lasts just more than 4 minutes. It was not clear where in the city the video was taken.
“Kid taking out trash being harassed by police. Father defending his son. Wrong person,” the TikTok poster wrote on Thursday. In a Zoom call with reporters on Friday night, lawyers for the family of Tashawn Bernard asked that police take down its Facebook post, saying the photo makes it appear as though the shirt Tashawn was wearing was white, when it actually was gray. The suspect police were looking for was wearing a white shirt, they said. “It does not accurately reflect what Tashawn was wearing,” said Ayanna Neal of Grewal Law. “They need to take down the post.” Lansing police posted an initial explanation on its social media accounts earlier Friday, followed late Friday afternoon by a statement from Police Chief Ellery Sosebee. “On Thursday afternoon, our officers were investigating a string of Kia thefts, including a specific one reported on the 3600 block of W. Jolly Road with multiple suspects,” the first post on Facebook said. “A witness described a suspect as wearing neon shorts and a white shirt. A responding officer saw a subject matching this description and attempted to make contact but the subject fled and ran west into the nearby apartment complex.
“A different officer was in the area and saw the young man pictured in the viral video wearing a very similar outfit and made contact with him. The initial officer responded and clarified that the young man in the video was not the suspect who fled earlier. Once this information was obtained, the young man was released, and officers continued to search the area. “We are including pictures of both individuals. We have blurred both photos to protect the identities of the subjects.” A photo of the people involved was posted, blurred out, along with the statement. Posts on X, formerly Twitter, expressed outrage over the video and the number of officers involved in the incident. “Just a kid taking out the trash — America,” user Kenny Akers wrote. “This city is paying six police officers to arrest a child for throwing out garbage,” user Frank Giugliano wrote. “I hope someone gets ahold of the young man detained today while taking out the trash because he ‘fits the description’ and lifts him up. He will need support around him,” Rob Thomas wrote in a Facebook post. LPD said they hope to put the situation behind them. “Community relations is a top priority for us as a department, from top-down,” the department wrote. “Our hope is we can put this unfortunate case of ‘wrong place, wrong time’ behind us and continue to represent the community that we serve.” After 4 p.m., the department released a statement attributed to Sosebee.
“The officers of the Lansing Police Department are working very hard to address the recent car thefts plaguing our city. In doing so, yesterday officers detained a young man who was wearing similar clothing and in the same apartment complex as an accused car thief who fled from officers on foot. When the officer made initial contact, it was near a trash bin but was after he had disposed of any garbage. The young man was then released to his father when eliminated as the accused. The command officer on the scene made contact with the young man’s father and explained the situation and apologized for the misunderstanding. I have reviewed the incident and can confirm the officer who contacted and detained the young man was respectful and professional during his investigation.” “It’s unfortunate that incidents like this occur but through communication and sharing of information, we can help people understand the whole story. We understand that something like this has an impact on all parties involved,” the statement read. “As the Chief of Police, I want to apologize that this incident had such an effect on this young man and his family. I’m asking for the community to consider all the facts of the situation before making a judgment. The relationship with our community has been and will continue to be a top priority for the Lansing Police Department.”
And late Friday afternoon, Schor apologized to the 12-year-old and his family in a statement. “The Lansing Police Department made a mistake in detaining the wrong person during a vehicle theft investigation,” Schor said in the statement. “The young man was wearing the exact same clothing as the suspect, however, it was quickly confirmed he was not the suspect in question and he was released. I join Chief Sosebee in apologizing to the young man and his family.” “LPD is in contact with the family and providing resources and support for any trauma involved. Our officers do their absolute best to protect Lansing, but in this case, a mistake was made, and we own it and apologize to those affected. As Mayor, I once again offer my sincere apology to this young man.” Attorneys for the family said Tashawn was taking out the trash at his home when he was approached by an officer holding a gun at his side. The boy was put in handcuffs and placed into the back of a police vehicle. “Our client has been traumatized by this incident, so much so that young Tashawn does not want to go outside … even to get the mail,” attorney Rico Neal said. “Instead of trying put the incident behind them, police should have apologized to Tashawn and considered how they can make the situation right.” the attorneys said. Tashawn’s father, Michael Bernard, described looking outside and seeing his son in handcuffs. He said his son “should not have been subjected to this treatment.” The attorneys said they were exploring “all legal options” for the family, including a possible lawsuit. They said the family wants to ensure that the same situation doesn’t happen to anyone else.
The Warwick Police Department released police officer body camera video from an incident last month that led to an assault charge against a police sergeant. Sgt. Bretton Kelly, 55, was charged with one count of simple assault for allegedly striking a handcuffed man during the July 15 incident, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter F. Neronha and Warwick Police Col. Bradford E. Connor said in a press release last month. The incident allegedly happened when the Warwick police responded to a domestic disturbance on Amsterdam Avenue, the officials said. Police officers arrested a woman, and her husband who tried pulling one of the officers away from his wife, Neronha and Connor said.
Officers arrested the man and put him in the back of a police vehicle, the officials said. Investigators allege that Kelly later went to the police vehicle, where the man was handcuffed and restrained by a seatbelt, and kicked him in the head and struck him in the face before forcibly removing him from the vehicle. The video shows a handcuffed man sitting in the back of a police cruiser, apparently feeling ill. As a police officer opens the door, the man’s body, restrained by a seatbelt, tilts out the door. “You gonna be all right?,” an officer asks. “I don’t know,” the man answers. After sitting back up, the man was breathing heavily and sweating. Officers opened cruiser windows and inquired about getting an ambulance. “I don’t feel good,” the man said and his body again tilted out the door, and he appeared to retch or vomit.
After two other officers and a sergeant can be seen approaching the car, a thud could be heard and the man said, “What the [expletive] you hit me for?” “Get out of the car,” he’s told. “What did you just punch me in the head for?,” the man says. “Cause you hit my officers,” a sergeant says then, pulls him from the car. “I got my hands cuffed. What the [expletive] are you doing?,” the man says. Kelly, a 17-year department veteran, is suspended with pay and will face departmental discipline when the criminal case is concluded, according to Connor.
An internal investigation is underway and Kenosha activists are speaking out after a video shared to social media appears to show a Kenosha police officer repeatedly striking a man the officer wrongly thought was involved in a serious hit-and-run crash.
Police would later find their suspects inside a bathroom of a restaurant.
The incident took place July 20 at the Applebee’s off Highway 50 in Kenosha. A crash happened at Highway 50 and Green Bay Road at about 11 p.m.
Police said witnesses described two Black males and one Black female who fled on foot toward Applebee’s. Another witness stated that the female was carrying a child, according to police.
An employee at the restaurant said some “suspicious people” were inside the restaurant and they believed may be “involved,” according to police. The employee then directed officers to two people, including the man seen being arrested in the video, who is Black and holding a baby.
“I’m not doing s — ! Let me the f— go!” the man yelled out as officers attempt to take the baby from him and take him into custody. The baby is eventually removed from the man’s arms and officers throw the man down to his stomach. A moment later, an officer appears to begin striking the man on or near his head, yelling commands of “Put your hands behind your back!”
Police said, “The male was being detained as the crash was being investigated. The male attempted to leave against officers orders and was restrained. He resisted and the incident that was caught on camera unfolded from there.”
The man, according to police, was not responsible for the hit-and-run. However, police said he has been charged with disorderly conduct, resisting, and obstructing an officer. The female who was with him also received the same charges, and possession of marijuana.
Police then discovered the “individuals responsible for the hit-and-run” inside the bathroom of the Applebee’s, police said in a statement.
A group of Kenosha advocates and activists held a press conference Wednesday night. It was organized by Leaders of Kenosha, a nonprofit that describes itself as “a conduit for social, transformative, and restorative justice,” according to its website.
Tanya McLean, executive director of Leaders of Kenosha, said “it’s ridiculous” that the man was charged and the officers should be ones facing charges. She said there was a complete lack of de-escalation from officers. “It just doesn’t seem that anyone was a voice of reason that had a uniform on,” she said.
“A complete lack of disregard for people that don’t look like you, that don’t have that uniform on,” she said. “What is it that just frightens you? Because we know that when people are fearful they act in irrational ways. So what is that you are so afraid of?”
“We don’t want to stand here and have these conversations about people being harmed when they’re simply having a meal with their family,” McLean said.
McLean said the man is from Illinois and he was there to have a meal and got up to change his baby’s diaper. “I’m not an attorney, but if you’re not under arrest, you can walk away, they didn’t know who these people were,” she said.
Alex Whitaker of the Kenosha Coalition for Dismantling Racism called for a “thorough and transparent” investigation into the incident. Kenosha police said the department will conduct an internal investigation on the officer’s use of force. Whitaker requested a third-party investigation as well.
Kimberly Jennings of Greensboro has been charged with two counts of simple assault on a child under 12. Police say Jennings, 62, assaulted two Black children at the Sedgefield Gardens Apartments. She has been arrested and taken to Guilford County Jail. According to the victim, 11-year-old Jace Eury, he and his sister Jayla were playing in the complex’s pool last week when Jennings hit her. Residents have identified Jennings as the property manager. Jace stood up for his sister and splashed Jennings with water.
Photo: Guiliford County Sheriff’s Office
Kimberly Jennings of Greensboro has been charged with two counts of simple assault on a child under 12. Police say Jennings, 62, assaulted two Black children at the Sedgefield Gardens Apartments. She has been arrested and taken to Guilford County Jail.
According to the victim, 11-year-old Jace Eury, he and his sister Jayla were playing in the complex’s pool last week when Jennings hit her. Residents have identified Jennings as the property manager. Jace stood up for his sister and splashed Jennings with water.
“When I was walking up the stairs to get to the gate, they were asking if I hit her because she had hit my sister first. So I hit her after she hit my sister,” Jace explained. “Then she poured Coke on me and hit me with the bottle twice.” Per a Greensboro police news release, officers responded the very next day.
Warrants were obtained and just a few hours later, Jennings was arrested. The footage of the incident has been circulating online, which galvanized a generous outpouring of public support. The mother of the siblings, Jae Eury, is grateful but still wants justice for her children.
“What she did to him, if I put one finger on her, I am the one that’s going to be in trouble. And that’s just not cool. You hit my child; you hit both of my children. You’ve been harassing my children all summer long, and all they wanted to do was just swim in the heat. Just swim, and enjoy themselves as children should,” Eury said.
“The outpouring is great, and it makes you feel good that people are behind you but it’s kind of making me angrier like I’m angry,” she continued. The family wants Jennings fired and is planning on filing a lawsuit against Jennings as well as the property management company.
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