From that drone shot, Winesteen one can easily discern the cross of Jesus, Sunday mornin' comin' down.
Is this a real notice sent out by the University? The letter has several typos and comments (e.g., "No building structures") that makes it look made up.
Also, what does "shall be trespassed from campus" mean?
Has ya's snortin', eh?
![]()
Winester
same deal with campus protests, tbh
police start and blame protesters
Fucj warrior cops
AND UKRAINE!!!!!
At least it wasn't a Pal.
Winester
Local officials, perhaps cowed by the recent notoriety of the "Goon Squad" in Pearl County, MS, left prosecution to the feds.
link“The City of Pearl, while not the sentencing body on this case, is glad to have this part of our recent history put behind us,” the municipality said in a statement. “The actions of Michael Green were reprehensible and inexcusable, and we have been deeply grieved to have been associated with this incident. We hope that this sentencing can help the victim and his family in their healing process, and we’re grateful to our federal partners who helped bring this terrible incident to justice swiftly.”
Race soldier takes another innocent life. If the George Floyd justice in policing act would've passed these shootings wouldn't continue to happen.
The asshole who killed Sonya Massey had already been kicked out of the US armed forces, been fired by four PDs and been convicted of DUI.
I guess those were job qualifications and not red flags with regard to his current position. Has that man been fired yet?
Last edited by Winehole23; 07-25-2024 at 04:55 PM.
No warrant, even if called, no entry into my place!
"an armed force for protection and participation"
(DEA agents joked about rape in a group chat. Then one of them was accused of it | AP News)“The agents would set up one meeting in the city of their choice but in reality were just going on vacation,” reads an FBI investigative report in the files obtained by AP. Other records detailed how agents frequented the red-light district of Amsterdam for pros utes and recorded “no enforcement operations” whatsoever during a weeklong trip to Norway, a country with one of the lowest crime rates in the world.
In the end, the DEA audit found the five-year operation could claim credit for just five convictions while agents s ed out $900,000 on travel, and $26,000 on meals as they partied around the world tapping a $1.9 million government fund of lawful money laundering proceeds they referred to as their “debauchery piggy bank.”
Like the illegals raped and murdered those two women.
BIG DEAL.
That's a uva photo capture there.
LA County Sheriff's Department announces policy formally banning deputy gangs - ABC7 Los Angeles
Former Sheriff Alex Villanueva long downplayed the existence or influence of such organizations, although he conceded during a January meeting of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission that some "subgroups" did operate within the agency. He denied they were violent gang-like organizations, likening them instead to "softball teams."
$1400 in average outstanding fines per citizen, in a town of 1200 people.
Findings Report - Lexington Police Department (justice.gov)Lexington is a small town near the Mississippi Delta, with a population of about 1,200 people. During the period covered by our investigation, its police department has had about ten officers, some of whom work part time. LPD made national news in July 2022 when a former officer released a recording of LPD’s Chief of Police, Sam Dobbins, bragging about shooting a Black man he referred to as a “n-----.” After the recording of Dobbins came to light, Lexington’s Board of Aldermen replaced him with Charles Henderson, who is still Chief today.
During Dobbins’s year-long tenure, and continuing under Henderson, LPD has pursued an aggressive approach to policing low-level offenses. Officers arrest people for minor infractions like driving without insurance and parking in a wheelchair accessible space. They also make illegal arrests, jailing people for conduct that is not criminal, like using profanity and owing money to the police.
LPD has paired its enforcement strategy with a forceful approach to collecting fines and fees. Officers arrest people who owe outstanding fines and jail them until they pay. They seek warrants demanding that people pay their debts or go to jail. They also generate money for the police simply by arresting people, particularly for minor infractions like loitering or traffic violations. Most charges result in fines, which in turn fund LPD’s increasing budget. Plus, to get out of jail, everyone whom LPD arrests must pay a $50 processing fee to the police, regardless of whether they can afford to pay it. As a result, in recent years, LPD’s revenue from fines and fees grew sevenfold. Community members’ debt grew as well.
Lexington sits in one of the poorest counties in the nation. Many people cannot afford to pay fines. The current total of outstanding fine debt to the Lexington Police Department is $1.7 million. “[T]hey violate your rights. You ain’t got no rights.” Woman unlawfully arrested by LPD As LPD carries out its aggressive enforcement and debt collection practices, officers routinely violate people’s rights. They make unjustified arrests and conduct illegal searches. They retaliate against people who criticize them. They use excessive force. They hold people in custody without promptly bringing them before a court, as the Cons ution requires. When they want information from specific people, they detain and jail them on uncons utional “investigative holds.” They disproportionately target Black people for arrests, including by arresting Black people who commit traffic offenses while letting white people who commit similar traffic offenses leave without consequences.
In the small town where LPD operates, people often experience many violations in quick succession. In one case, officers illegally searched a woman’s home, illegally arrested her, and sexually harassed her. The woman told us, “[T]hey violate your rights. You ain’t got no rights. You can’t talk. When it comes to them, you have nothing. It’s their word. Don’t even try to open up your mouth to say nothing.”1
Shortly after we announced our investigation in November 2023, LPD briefly stopped making any arrests. An LPD officer—who later resigned—told us that a supervisor instructed 1If not otherwise cited, all quotes in this Report were stated directly to DOJ investigators or on the body-worn camera footage that we reviewed. 2 officers not to set up checkpoints or arrest people for owing fines until further notice. But less than two weeks later, arrests resumed, and LPD continued its unlawful practices.
Mount Vernon, NY police has a policy of strip searching all detainees and even some people it didn't arrest.
Another DOJ Investigation Of A Cop Shop Finds Multiple Rights Violations | TechdirtUntil at least the fall of 2022, it was the Mount Vernon force’s practice to strip search every person it arrested, according to the report. Officers also strip-searched people they did not arrest, detained and interrogated people without formally arresting them, and arrested people for verbally criticizing police officers.You can’t just strip search everyone you arrest or detain. You can (sometimes) do this during the booking process if you have reason to believe they might have stashed contraband somewhere inside themselves, but you really can’t do this (in almost every case) to people who haven’t even been arrested.
Illegal strip and cavity searches continued until at least 2023, the report found.
And what brought… well, not the end of it, but at least a brief slowdown to this pattern and practice of illegal strip searches? It was the arrival of the DOJ to open an investigation. And even the presence of DOJ investigators wasn’t enough to actually force the Mt. Vernon PD to stop doing it altogether.
The investigators said that while the practice was “curtailed” during its probe, “we are not confident that these practices have ended.”The report [PDF] makes it clear it’s not going to get any better in Mt. Vernon any time soon, even if Trump decides the DOJ should still perform the important work of at least attempting to instill accountability in law enforcement agencies around the nation.
Even if it can move forward with a consent decree, the DOJ seems doubtful any efforts it makes will result in permanent improvements.
MVPD’s practices are directly attributable to significant systemic deficiencies in MVPD’s policies, training, supervision, and accountability systems, all of which are rooted in a long history of municipal dysfunction. Municipal financial mismanagement has seriously eroded MVPD’s ability to follow basic practices standard in modern policing, such as keeping its 911 system up and running, providing its officers with Taser cartridges so they have a less-lethal force option, and ensuring that officers who interact with the public are equipped with body-worn cameras.
Leadership failures have resulted in the absence of needed policies or ones that have not been updated in decades; a complete lack of training on critical topics; and ineffective supervision, including supervisors investigating incidents in which they were personally involved. MVPD’s data collection and records management are also deeply deficient. MVPD keeps no records of stops unless they result in arrests, for example, and despite our standing requests from early in the investigation for all misconduct files, MVPD continued to discover new files up until a few months ago. Put simply, MVPD does not have much of the basic infrastructure necessary to provide Cons utional and effective policing in the 21st century.
Robert Brooks found the out
snacks finding his fap material on Elon's site.
https://mississippitoday.org/2025/02...by-goon-squad/In a series of interviews from prison, a former Mississippi sheriff’s deputy described for the first time how he and others in his department regularly entered homes without warrants, beat people to get information and illegally seized evidence that helped convict people of drug crimes.
His statements corroborate many aspects of an investigation by The New York Times and Mississippi Today that uncovered a two-decade reign of terror by Rankin County sheriff’s deputies, including those who called themselves the “Goon Squad.” They also shed new light on the deputies’ tactics and the scope of their violent and illegal behavior.
The former deputy, Christian Dedmon, who once led the department’s narcotics division,told Mississippi Today in emails and phone calls that drug raids occurred in suburban Rankin County, outside Jackson, almost every week for years.
He said deputies regularly brutalized and humiliated suspects to get them to share information during the raids. And he said they often seized evidence without a legally required warrant, raising questions about possible wrongful convictions in hundreds of narcotics cases stemming from the raids.
For some raids, he said, the deputies would falsely describe emergency cir stances that gave them cover for searching without a warrant; for others, they would falsely claim that evidence was in plain sight.
He said deputies were entering homes without warrants so often that in 2022 a senior detective warned him that prosecutors in the district attorney’s office had noticed and had demanded they stop.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)