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  1. #2376
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    An emboldened ICE reportedly wants to become a part of the U.S. intelligence community

    “Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) should be able to join the U.S. Intelligence Community and get access to spy agency secrets and tools that would help them surveil millions of Americans regardless of their immigration status”

    is something no decent person has ever said,

    but ICE officials emboldened under the mass deportation policies of Donald Trump’s administration are actively exploring the possibility:

    Internal advocates for joining the America’s spy agencies—known as the Intelligence Community or the IC—focus on the potential benefits to the agency’s work on counterproliferation, money laundering, counterterror, and cybercrime.

    The official added that joining the IC could also be useful for the agency’s immigration enforcement work––in particular, their efforts to find and arrest undo ented immigrants with criminal arrest warrants (known in ICE as fugitive aliens).


    But civil liberties advocates and government watchdog groups—as well as some current and former U.S. officials—are concerned at the prospect of the nation’s immigration enforcers joining the ranks of America’s spies.

    “The idea that ICE could potentially get access to warrantless surveillance is frankly terrifying,”

    “The prospect of ICE joining the Intelligence Community, if true, should sound alarm bells,” he said.

    “Such a move threatens to give an agency responsible for domestic immigration enforcement access to a vast pool of sensitive information collected by our spy agencies for foreign intelligence purposes.

    Those spying tools do not belong in the hands of ICE agents.”

    https://www.dailykos.com/stories/201...tail=emaildkre

    My $0.01 bet? Trash/Sessions will give ICE whatever it wants.





  2. #2377
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    John Kelly’s true self and ICE’s mission creep: Tyranny is spreading

    Darkest side of the Trump agenda: Kelly reveals his true colors and ICE seeks to join the intelligence communit

    Many of us were actually slightly relieved to see [Kelly] leave his former post as the secretary of Homeland Security, where his hardline anti-immigrant at udes were being implemented in ways that had direct effects on people's lives.

    Unfortunately, DHS, and particularly Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is still eagerly carrying out his mission.

    ICE officers were reportedly giddy with excitement at the election of

    Donald Trump, who promised to let them "take the gloves off"

    and go after any undo ented workers and their families they choose.

    His promise to crack down on sanctuary cities had them over the moon.


    ICE agents ...

    pushed hard for the authorization to increase harassment, pursuit and incarceration

    of people for the "crime" of being a non-citizen in America.

    It's not as if ICE wasn't busy under the previous administration.

    They deported a whole lot of people. Millions. But it wasn't enough.

    ICE demanded the authority to go after law-abiding workers who've been in the country for decades and have families.

    They wanted to raid businesses and homes and arrest people who were minding their own business, paying taxes, going to school, joining the military and otherwise behaving as ordinary members of society.

    Immigration arrests have increased by 42 percent since Trump took office and they are getting more and more aggressive.

    ICE is very serious about chasing down every immigrant who has entered the country illegally or overstayed a visa.

    Its agents want to use every possible means to get that job done, which explains why they are now pushing to have ICE reclassified as an intelligence agency and get access to all that surveillance data they are collecting on average people going about their business.

    Apparently, there can't be too many law enforcement agencies rifling through the private lives of average people.

    You can bet that these ICE agents would not just be invading the privacy of undo ented immigrants.

    That's not how "raw intelligence" works.

    ... results in people being unable to get due process and a fair trial under the guise of protecting national security.

    Homeland Security officials are
    already using junk science to justify long-term surveillance of Muslims.

    This group of eager beavers have little or no training in the required cons utional procedures and are unlikely to be apt pupils.

    https://www.salon.com/2018/02/09/joh...-is-spreading/

    For libertarian frauds, coservatives, Trash fellators, Repug, "big government" is ALWAYS bad,

    but the monstrously huge, metastasizing, lawless, unaccountable, no-oversight BigPoliceState is never big enough



  3. #2378
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    ICE Lawyer Charged With Trying To Defraud Immigrants By Stealing Their Iden ies

    A top attorney with Immigration and Customs Enforcement reportedly resigned this week after being charged with stealing several immigrants’ iden ies to obtain money and property.

    Raphael A. Sanchez, the agency’s chief counsel in its Seattle branch, was charged Monday with one count wire fraud and one count of aggravated iden y theft, court do ents show.

    During a four-year period, he allegedly attempted to defraud American Express, Bank of America, Capital One, Citibank, Discover, and JPMorgan Chase by using the personal information of seven people whose cases were being processed by ICE.


    He even sent emails from his official ICE address to his personal email containing a copy of someone’s energy bill, as well as photos of a U.S. permanent resident card and a Chinese passport, prosecutors say.

    https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...gEmail__021418

    Stealing from immigrants? no problem

    but defraud BigFinance? BIG problem



  4. #2379
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    Critics blast all-white jury for Oklahoma cop accused of raping black women and teens




    The trial of the former Oklahoma City police officer accused of a string of sexual assaults against black women began this week with an all-white jury.

    Daniel Holtzclaw is alleged to have sexually assaulted 12 women and a 17-year-old girl while on duty. Prosecutors have said he targeted middle-aged black women of limited means who had cause to want to avoid the police, such as outstanding warrants.

    Though African Americans make up 16% of the population of Oklahoma County there are no black people among the eight men and four women on the jury.

    Holtzclaw faces 36 charges, including rape, forcible oral sodomy and sexual battery, and could be sentenced to life imprisonment. He has pleaded not guilty.

    Prosecutors contend that Holtzclaw began committing sex crimes in December 2013, when
    he coerced a hospitalised woman who was high on drugs and handcuffed to a bedrail into performing oral sex, with the promise that the charges would be dropped.

    His youngest accuser said she was 17 when he raped her on her mother’s porch after groping her, ostensibly to search for drugs.

    http://www.rawstory.com/2015/11/crit...e+Raw+Story%29

    spurraider21 this case is interesting to me. If you're not familiar with Holtzclaw, I highly recommend watching his interrogation on youtube. Is this guy innocent based on the evidence here below?


    Anti-Cop Frenzy Led to This Officer’s Wrongful Conviction. Prosecutors Should Be Ashamed.

    As the Oklahoma attorney general’s office fights to keep hidden from public view the results of secret hearings on the DNA science flaws and falsehoods in former Oklahoma City police officer Daniel Holtzclaw’s case, two prominent experts have stepped forward to shed bright light on the government’s myriad mind-boggling failures.

    Forensic scientist, criminal profiler, and crime reconstructionist Dr. Brent Turvey and independent forensic DNA consultant Suzanna Ryan spoke out about the Holtzclaw case for the newest episode of my investigative program on CRTV.com.

    Reflecting on the confirmation bias that drove the investigation, the elementary failures of evidence collection, and the forensic missteps, Turvey told me that he and his colleagues “cannot understand how this case got into trial at all.”

    Holtzclaw is the wrongfully convicted Oklahoma City patrolman caught up in the nationwide anti-cop frenzy and social justice riots of Ferguson and Baltimore.

    After initial accuser Jannie Ligons—who is suing Holtzclaw in a high-dollar lawsuit represented by Al Sharpton 2.0, Benjamin Crump—went public with her sensational sexual assault claims in June 2014, Oklahoma City sex-crimes Detectives Rocky Gregory and Kim Davis solicited a field of 13 total accusers. They were all black women and almost all had histories of drug abuse, mental illness, pros ution, and multiple crimes.

    No “linkage analysis” was done to establish a factual basis for the alleged victim profile, Turvey told me. The profile was created from gut feelings, not science or professional expertise.

    Seven additional accusers, including one male, told such preposterous stories that the cops were forced to reject them out of hand. Only one was prosecuted for lying to police. Of the 13 who went to trial, the jury rejected five of the accusers’ stories and cleared Daniel of their charges (18 out of 36 total).

    Detectives Gregory and Davis preemptively told accusers they were searching for sexual assault victims of a “bad guy” on the police force and badgered women who repeatedly had denied they were victims of any sexual improprieties, refused to look at lineups, or described an alleged attacker as “short” and “black” or “dark-skinned” (Daniel is 6-foot-1, pale, and half Japanese).

    Turvey—who has worked for government agencies and universities across the world and authored multiple peer-reviewed textbooks on criminal profiling and investigation, forensic criminology and victimology, forensic science, criminal justice ethics, and law enforcement corruption—called the Oklahoma City detectives’ approach “one of the most biased ways of approaching criminal investigation that (he’d) ever seen.”

    “You have detectives who have started with the notion that Holtzclaw is guilty,” Turvey recounted, “searching through as many potential contacts as he’s ever had” to confirm their narrative.

    Detectives weren’t interested in pursuing other leads who matched accusers’ descriptions. They were “just interested in making their case against Officer Holtzclaw. That’s the definition of confirmation bias.”

    It’s a major red flag, Turvey (whose most recent textbook is on false allegations) told me, “because the possibility that you’re dealing with somebody who’s falsely reporting the crime goes way up when you approach the case in this fashion.”

    Out of the eight remaining accusers’ claims and alleged crime scenes, there were zero corroborating witnesses, and there was zero direct forensic evidence.

    The Oklahoma City Police Department’s crime lab identified what it characterized as “epithelial cell” DNA from one lone accuser—a troubled 17-year-old girl with a history of violent crime who called Daniel a “hot cop.” Her trace DNA became the linchpin in the case.

    At her lab in Carlsbad, California, Ryan showed me how Oklahoma City police crime lab analyst Elaine Taylor neglected to perform simple serological and forensic tests on Holtzclaw’s uniform pants.

    She explained that Taylor did not use an alternate light source, “which is a very common practice” in sexual assault cases to detect saliva or vaginal fluid stains. Nor did Taylor conduct basic saliva tests (which she oddly told the jury she “refused” to do) or a presumptive vaginal fluid test, which Ryan demonstrated.

    Ryan also noted how Taylor “incorrectly stated that no male DNA was present in two” of four DNA samples taken, “when in fact there was.”

    The reason the error was so grave is that prosecutor Gayland Gieger (who has zero training in forensic science) used Taylor’s false characterization to argue and bolster his own unscientific conclusion that because Holtzclaw’s DNA was not found in the minuscule mixtures of multiple contributors, the DNA could have only gotten there through sexual contact via the teen accuser’s vaginal fluid.

    “Well, you can’t say that,” Ryan commented. “If you don’t do a test for something, you can’t make a statement like that. … There was absolutely no body fluid identification,” she told me. “It’s not scientifically sound.”

    Moreover, in reaction to Gieger’s mockery of transfer DNA at trial and Gregory and Davis’s claims to me that it is “almost impossible” to transfer DNA indirectly, Ryan, who has worked as a DNA analyst for both public and private DNA labs and served as an expert witness in forensic serology and DNA analysis more than 100 times, forcefully responded:

    That’s not what the journal research shows. There are article after article after article talking about not just primary transfer—we directly contact each other—but secondary transfer. Now we’re discovering there’s tertiary transfer. A study by Dr. Peter Gill, who’s one of the co-authors of our paper (on Holtzclaw) as well as a co-author of a recent journal article, found quaternary transfer.

    Both Turvey and Ryan point to the incompetent mishandling of the evidence bag containing Holtzclaw’s pants by Rocky Gregory (who is the son-in-law of forensic analyst Elaine Taylor) as a potential route for DNA transfer and contamination.

    While watching video of Gregory sticking his bare hand in the evidence bag, Turvey remarked:

    This shows somebody who doesn’t understand physical evidence, doesn’t care about the physical evidence, so it’s not just creating an environment where contamination is likely, but also showing a culture where they don’t care about physical evidence at all.

    Turvey and Ryan, who do not know each other and who have had no contact with Holtzclaw or his family, are two of six internationally renowned experts including Dr. Peter Gill who released a public report on scientific issues in Holtzclaw’s case last summer.

    Because of systemic failures in the basic testing, handling, collection, analysis, and interpretation of evidence, the scientists determined that Holtzclaw “was deprived of his due process right to a fair trial” and that his “conviction should be overturned and he should be given a new trial.”

    Scientific and ethical lapses before, during, and after the Holtzclaw trial should raise alarm bells across forensic and investigative communities inside and outside the Sooner State. Repeated evasions of transparency by Oklahoma prosecutors and police brass about their handling of the Holtzclaw case should trouble criminal justice watchdogs on all sides of the ideological spectrum nationwide.

    Justice, like democracy, dies in the darkness.

    http://dailysignal.com/2018/02/14/an...utors-ashamed/

  5. #2380
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    ICE PUT IMMIGRANT WOMAN, WHO ALLEGED SEXUAL ABUSE, IN SOLITARY TO MAKE HER RECANT CLAIMS

    An incarcerated immigrant woman, who alleged sexual harassment and assault by a corrections officer, said she was thrown in solitary confinement for 60 hours and was told she would not be released until she publicly recanted her accusations.

    Laura Monterrosa is a 23 year old immigrant from El Salvador detained at the T. Don Hutto Residential Center, a private prison operated by CoreCivic (formerly known as Corrections Corporation of America).

    Grassroots Leadership, a Texas-based immigrant rights group advocating on behalf of Monterrosa, said she was isolated between 11:00 PM on Friday, February 9, and 11:00 AM on Monday, February 12.

    She was threatened with more isolation if she didn’t publicly state she was not sexually abused by staff.


    https://shadowproof.com/2018/02/14/i...recant-claims/

    America The Hole



  6. #2381
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    spurraider21 this case is interesting to me. If you're not familiar with Holtzclaw, I highly recommend watching his interrogation on youtube. Is this guy innocent based on the evidence here below?
    man, the two sources i have in that link are rawstory and dailysignal

    might need to do some independent research given what i have to work with here. though the rawstory article mainly just says "the prosecution contends," etc while the dailysignal one is much more hyperpartisan with the "wrongfully convicted, sensationalist claims" language

    also i haven't seen the interrogation video and don't really know much about this case at all

  7. #2382
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    Fourth Circuit: It's not okay to handcuff school children, but go ahead and do it anyway

    The Fourth Circuit, which hears federal appeals from Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, determined that handcuffing E.W. violated her Fourth Amendment rights. (In fact, handcuffing children is just about uniformly uncons utional.)

    But this Court has never held that using handcuffs is per se reasonable. Rather, the Fourth Amendment requires us to assess the reasonableness of using handcuffs based on the cir stances.

    A lawful arrest does not categorically legitimize binding a person’s wrists in chains.

    And the troubling facts of the present case highlight why such a per se rule would be ill-advised.

    the Fourth Circuit ruled that Dolgos is off the hook courtesy of an oft-abused legal doctrine, “qualified immunity.”

    Qualified immunity protects officials from liability as long as they don’t violate clearly established rights, or rights that the officials should reasonably have known about.


    Somehow, the Fourth Circuit panel decided that, despite how well-established it is that handcuffing children violates their cons utional rights,

    Dolgos couldn’t be expected to know that handcuffing a completely compliant 10-year-old girl on whom she had one foot and 60 pounds in the presence of two other adults cons uted excessive force.

    https://www.dailykos.com/stories/201...d-do-it-anyway

    Insanity, inanity in Federal appeals courts will be horribly worse, for decades, as the oligarchy/Repugs stuff the Fed appeals courts with right-wing ideologues, extremist, and incompetents.

    https://www.dailykos.com/stories/201...d-do-it-anyway

  8. #2383
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    NYPD Case Calls Attention to 'Consent Defense' That Can Be Used by Officers Accused of Rape in 35 States

    "It should be clear across the state for officers from every department, that when someone is in custody they do not have the ability to consent to sexual activity."

    in 34 other states where police officers are legally allowed to sexually assault people they take into custody.

    While New York makes it illegal for corrections officers to have sexual contact with inmates,

    police officers can legally claim that detainees consented to sexual activity,

    protecting them from sexual assault charges.

    https://www.commondreams.org/news/20...ccused-rape-35


    America The Beautifully Untouchable Militarized Police State




  9. #2384
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    Michigan prisoner turned celebrated author may face incarceration bill

    Curtis Dawkins wrote The Graybar Hotel while serving a life sentence. Now the state says proceeds from the work belong to them

    Curtis Dawkins, a Michigan prisoner and publishing sensation, could be forced to repay the costs of his incarceration from the proceeds of his literary work.

    The convicted murderer is serving a life sentence for a 2004 crime spree on Halloween night that left one man dead.

    His debut collection of short stories,
    The Graybar Hotel, was written in a Michigan penitentiary and published in July.


    But now the Michigan department of treasury is seeking 90% of Dawkins’s assets, including “proceeds from publications, future payments, royalties” from the book.

    Michigan puts the cost of his incarceration at $72,000;

    Dawkins, 49, received a $150,000 advance from Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster.

    The state claims that Dawkins, who is representing himself at a hearing next week in Kalamazoo, has no right to pass his literary earnings to his family.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...an-prison-bill


    Dawkins will be screwed out of his money is a safe bet.



  10. #2385
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    When She Pursued A Rape Charge, The Cop On The Case Pursued Her

    The Florida woman felt she had to have sex with detective Michel Toro to ensure he worked on her case.

    Investigators agreed and said he'd violated state law, but Toro was never charged.

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/albertsamaha/when-she-pursued-a-rape-charge-the-cop-on-the-case-pursued?utm_term=.ypzp6ewpQ#.ex7J26lJX

    Another case of a cop or deputy ing an arrestee or plaintiff or victim, exploiting his power over her, legal in majority of states.



  11. #2386
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    Black Mother Charged with Homicide After Off-Duty Cop Slams Into Her Car at 94 MPH

    Officer Christopher Manuel, 28, struck a Nissan carrying four adults and four children about 8pm on Oct. 12

    while driving his Corvette at speeds approaching 100 mph, police said.

    The posted speed limit for that road was 50 mph.


    https://www.alternet.org/news-amp-po...her-car-94-mph



  12. #2387
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    Secret NYPD Files: Officers Can Lie And Brutally Beat People — And Still Keep Their Jobs

    Internal NYPD files show that hundreds of officers who committed the most serious offenses — from lying to grand juries to physically attacking innocent people — got to keep their jobs, their pensions, and their tremendous power over New Yorkers' lives.

    from 2011 to 2015 at least 319 New York Police Department employees who committed offenses serious enough to merit firing were allowed to keep their jobs.

    Many of the officers lied, cheated, stole, or assaulted New York City residents.

    At least fifty employees lied on official reports,

    under oath, or

    during an internal affairs investigation.

    Thirty-eight were found guilty by a police tribunal of excessive force,

    getting into a fight, or

    firing their gun unnecessarily.

    Fifty-seven were guilty of driving under the influence.

    Seventy-one were guilty of ticket-fixing.

    One officer, Jarrett Dill, threatened to kill someone.

    Another, Roberson Tunis, sexually harassed and inappropriately touched a fellow officer.

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/kendalltagg...gm#.va2jA9E1dj



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    Court Says Arizona Residents Hassled By CBP Encroachment Can Move Forward With Their First Amendment Lawsuit

    About a half-decade ago, Customs and Border Patrol turned roads in and out of a small Arizona town into East Germany.

    The backstory to the lawsuit is stunning, in a "surely this can't be happening in America" sort of way.

    what can happen when the federal government is allowed to turn large swathes of American soil into a proto-DMZ with armed guards and "papers, please" checkpoints.

    Every time Jack Driscoll drives the 32 miles from this remote outpost in southeastern Arizona to the closest supermarket,

    or to doctor’s appointments,

    or to a pharmacy to fill his prescriptions,

    he must stop at a Border Patrol checkpoint and answer the same question:

    “Are you a U.S. citizen?”


    Sometimes, Border Patrol agents ask where he is going or coming from,

    the type of car he is driving,

    what is in that bag on the back seat or

    what brings him to these parts,

    even though he has lived here for more than a year.

    none of these residents ever leave the country.

    All of this activity --

    this constant monitoring of 800 residents of a small Arizona town --

    targets US citizens going from place to place entirely within US borders.

    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20...-lawsuit.shtml

    Godwin alert: DHS/CBP have literally become America's SchutzStaffel

    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20180217/10303039257/court-says-arizona-residents-hassled-cbp-encroachment-can-move-forward-with-their-first-amendment-lawsuit.shtml



    and of course, as with all of law enforcement, prison/jail staff, it attracts real sickos into the force.

  14. #2389
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    Boo, you've never been to Laredo? You need to get out more, Boutplug.

  15. #2390
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    Theres one on 90 out past Langtry too.

  16. #2391
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    Of course not ...

    D.A. declines to charge former LAPD officer in fatal shooting of homeless man near Venice boardwalk


    Officer Clifford Proctor — who resigned from the Los Angeles Police Department in 2017 — shot and killed Brendon Glenn, a New York native who was staying near the famed boardwalk.

    The shooting of the unarmed, black homeless man drew scrutiny from the start,

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/l...s=mcnewsletter



  17. #2392
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    Sheriff who pocketed $750G from inmate food fund bought beach house for $740G



    Entrekin like other Alabama sheriffs believe a pre-World War II state law allows them to keep any “excess inmate-feeding funds” for themselves.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/03/14...-for-740g.html

  18. #2393
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    Police Department With Eight Full-Time Officers Acquired 31 Military Vehicles Thru DoD's Surplus Program

    An 11-member police force for a Delaware town with 400 residents has availed itself of more than $3 million in 1033 gear over the last five years.

    This first came to light late last year when do ents obtained by Muckrock prompted town officials to wonder why they hadn't been notified of the department's stockpile.

    When asked if the Dewey PD could account for all of the items by providing the physical location of items in their possession and paper trails for items sold, Sgt. Cliff Dempsey said, “We’re not going to comment on that matter at this time.”


    On the agenda for a Nov. 11 Dewey Beach commissioners’ meeting is the discussion of three options for to the 1033 program:


    1. require the DBPD to provide complete accounting for property received through any federal or surplus property program,


    2. accept a recommendation from the town’s audit committee to utilize the town’s auditors, or


    3. hire an independent consultant to conduct a more comprehensive review
    .

    Some of the military equipment can be located.

    A recent report by the Milford Beacon contains a photo showing five military trucks and two ATVs parked in the department's storage lot. But that is only a small part of the Dewey PD's total holdings.

    [A]mong hundreds of line items turned over between March 2013 and December 2017, the police acquired

    a total of 12 ATVs,

    51 jackets or parkas and

    13 space heaters, and

    19 trucks of all kinds.


    Dewey’s department has just eight full-time and three part-time officers,

    the town population is less than 400 people and

    the town itself is a just mile long and two blocks wide.

    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20...-program.shtml



  19. #2394
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    Unarmed black man carrying only a cellphone when he was shot by cops

    22-year-old Stephon Clark is the latest black man to be unfairly targeted by the police. He leaves behind two sons

    Stephon Clark was gunned down in the backyard of the south Sacramento home he shared with his grandparents and siblings, his 25-year-old brother Stevante Clark told The Sacramento Bee.

    The police department said officers were responding to a call that a 6-foot-1 black man wearing a black-hooded sweatshirt and dark pants was taking cover in a residential backyard after shattering car windows with a toolbar.

    https://www.salon.com/2018/03/21/unarmed-black-victim-carrying-only-a-cellphone-when-he-was-shot-by-cops/

    AKA, Living (and dying) While Black

    The assumption is always that the two shooters are lying, no witnesses.




  20. #2395
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    For Black Motorists, a Never-Ending Fear of Being Stopped

    Minorities are pulled over by police at higher rates than whites. Many see a troubling message: You don't belong.

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/m..._rd=1495010081

    ==============

    For Decades, Our Coverage Was Racist. To Rise Above Our Past, We Must Acknowledge It


    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/m...acism-history/

  21. #2396
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    Unarmed black man carrying only a cellphone when he was shot by cops

    22-year-old Stephon Clark is the latest black man to be unfairly targeted by the police. He leaves behind two sons

    Stephon Clark was gunned down in the backyard of the south Sacramento home he shared with his grandparents and siblings, his 25-year-old brother Stevante Clark told The Sacramento Bee.

    The police department said officers were responding to a call that a 6-foot-1 black man wearing a black-hooded sweatshirt and dark pants was taking cover in a residential backyard after shattering car windows with a toolbar.

    https://www.salon.com/2018/03/21/unarmed-black-victim-carrying-only-a-cellphone-when-he-was-shot-by-cops/

    AKA, Living (and dying) While Black

    The assumption is always that the two shooters are lying, no witnesses.



    this pisses me off. only positive here is it was caught on camera...but we know how that goes.


  22. #2397
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
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    this pisses me off. only positive here is it was caught on camera...but we know how that goes.

    those cops deserve the same treatment they gave clark.

  23. #2398
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    Ex-Minnesota officer charged with murdering Australian a flight risk: prosecutors



    Damond, who was living in Minneapolis, called 911 to report a possible sexual assault near her house, and she approached the police after their arrival, authorities said.

    Matthew Harrity, the officer driving the police car from which Noor shot, said he was startled by a loud sound and both officers “got spooked” when Damond appeared out of nowhere, prosecutors said.

    https://www.rawstory.com/2018/03/ex-minnesota-officer-charged-murdering-australian-flight-risk-prosecutors/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaig n=Feed%3A+TheRawStory+%28The+Raw+Story%29

  24. #2399
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    Of course, what else in a slave state?

    No charges to be filed against officers in Alton Sterling death, Louisiana attorney general says

    Sterling, 37, was shot and killed by one of two police officers who confronted him outside a convenience store in July 2016.

    Cell phone video showed Sterling, a black man, pinned to the ground by the white Baton Rouge police officers before he was shot;

    police said ... Sterling was shot because he was reaching for a gun.


    video evidence couldn't prove or disprove Salamoni's assertion that Sterling was reaching for a gun.

    Abdullah Muflahi, the owner of the Triple S Food Mart in Baton Rouge where Sterling was shot, also sued Baton Rouge and its police department.

    Muflahi accused authorities of illegally taking him into custody and confiscating his security system without a warrant.

    https://www.cnn.com/2018/03/27/us/alton-sterling-investigation/index.html

    did the police present (or plant) Sterling's gun?

    racist JeBo's racist DoJ of course played along with cops killing a knitter face down on the ground.



  25. #2400
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    the militarized police state implemented on TX school kids

    Texas schools suspended tens of thousands of students in second grade or younger, report says

    The report warned educators and policy leaders of the risks that in-school suspensions continue to have on pre-K to second grade students in Texas public schools.

    Texas schools issued more than 64,000 in-school suspensions to students in second grade or younger during the 2015-16 school year, and

    a disproportionate number of those students were black, male, in foster care or in special education,

    more than 36,000 students received out-of-school suspensions during that time.

    The following year, lawmakers passed a bill that banned out-of-school suspensions for students up to the second grade.

    “Schools are suspending little kids as young as four years old, many of whom are in a classroom for the first time in their lives,”

    Texans Care for Children CEO Stephanie Rubin said in a statement.

    “Suspending our youngest students interrupts their education,

    communicates to them that they don’t belong, and

    misses a critical opportunity to actually address why they might be acting out.”

    https://www.texastribune.org/2018/03...ons-report-sa/

    American civilization, brutality reigns.



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