I had to stop watching halfway through it. That's awful. He went to get his buddy's ID when he asked him for it and he stopped when he was told to by the cop. And "stop resisting my dog!" Really? A dog is biting his leg off and you expect him to just sit still and do nothing? I don't understand why cops can't grasp that people react when in pain. Put a knee in a person's back and that person is going to move. Let a dog bite a person's leg and that person is going to react.
Police: Florida deputy tried to kill elderly woman, frame it as suicide http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/24/us/florida-arrest-elderly/index.html According to an affidavit and police timeline of the case, Bybee befriended the 79-year-old woman shortly after responding to a call for service on October 21, 2016. He began making regular visits to her home and introduced her to members of his family in an effort to gain her trust, Knight said. By December 20, the woman called police to report that Bybee was harassing her and trying to control her. The sheriff's office then launched an internal affairs investigation. Investigators learned that the woman had asked Bybee to take care of her dog while she was ill and in the hospital. He received a check for $1,000 in case the dog had medical needs. However, the affidavit accuses Bybee of depositing that check in his personal bank account. In addition, he allegedly gave the dog away on Craigslist without the woman's consent. On January 9, with the internal investigation well under way, detectives seized an envelope mailed to Bybee at the Sarasota Sheriff's Office, according to officials. Inside were four checks appearing to be from the woman made out to Bybee and his three children that totaled $65,000. However, the woman said she did not address or sign the checks, and forensic analysis showed Bybee's fingerprints on one of the checks, officials said. Bybee was immediately placed on administrative leave. Things escalated dramatically three days later. That's when the woman reported to the sheriff's office that Bybee had entered her unlocked front door while wearing dark clothes and latex gloves, according to officials. Once inside, Bybee allegedly held the woman down and forced prescription medication into her mouth, causing lacerations and abrasions to her face as well as bruising to her body. She lost consciousness and called for help when she awoke. Investigators discovered that the door to her garage was left open and her car was left running, filling her home with carbon monoxide.
https://bluelivesmatter.blue/lawrence-crosby-evanston-police-video-steal-car/ Holy shit this article "Furthermore, because Crosby was contracting his muscles to resist the officers’ efforts to get him on the ground (the video makes it apparent he is resisting the officers’ efforts,) he moved from simply being non-compliant to actively resisting."
the common denominator in most of these "bad police" videos seems to be stemming from an officer escalating unnecessarily. The Blue Lives Matter people want to examine only the citizen's actions with the officer's reactions justified as a response. My thought is that it all went bad when they decided to execute a high risk stop on a suspect who is not driving erratically or evading.
Read some of the articles they wrote in that series. Some scary shit going down at the FBI. Tread carefully about what y'all are saying online.
Surprised this hasn't garnered more publicity...cop shoots guy in the back http://nashvillepublicradio.org/pos...hbors-say-it-could-have-been-avoided#stream/0
Officer seems to have a questionable past too http://www.tennessean.com/story/new...-stop-and-search-history-shows-bias/98072030/
Man attacks cop then pulls a gun? Yeah, I'd imagine most sane people don't think the cop did anything wrong. The courts will say he didn't do anything wrong either.
I'm generally against cops killing any unarmed person, but there have to be some pretty extenuating circumstances for me to fault an officer for shooting somebody brandishing a weapon. From my initial viewing of that video and knowing nothing else, I'm not convinced the officer's conduct was inexcusable.
One is a story about how the suspect was actively using his body to remove the gun from the officer's holster and the other is an account in which the officer admits none of that happened.
He never said, either time, that Brown was trying to take it from the holster, those pics leave out that when he talked about Brown trying to take it, it was after he drew the gun. So the story in both cases, Brown never tried to take it from the holster, but did try to take it from him after it was drawn, they didn't ask that question in the civil case, they only asked if he tried to take it while it was holstered.
Ahh, I see. I assume you can't tell us much about it? But yea it takes a nut to do some shit like that.
Savage. He's more of just a nut than a bad cop. Him being a cop was just a coincidence. He could have just as easily worked for a bank. Crazy is crazy and every profession has them.
TULSA - A federal jury has ruled in favor of the estate of Elliot Williams, an army veteran who died in the jail in 2011 after suffering a broken neck and receiving little or no medical treatment. The ruling came Monday after weeks of testimony which detailed how Williams spent days lying on the floor of his cell while guards and medical personnel ignored his cries for help. They tossed food into the cell, and put water just out of his reach, because they apparently thought he was faking his injuries. The jury ruled that the county must pay $10.2 million in damages, and former Sheriff Stanley Glanz an additional $250,000. The last 51 hours of Williams’ death were captured by the jail’s own video surveillance system. Dan Smolen, the attorney for Williams’ estate, told KRMG the case was unprecedented, in his experience. “It’s the only case that I’m aware of, not just here locally in Tulsa but really nationally, dealing with people held in a detention setting where the records depict one thing happening, but the reality of what's truly happening is caught on film over such an extended period of time,” Smolen said. Jail records indicated Williams was eating, and receiving medical attention, when the video shows that was clearly not the case. “We believe that this prolonged and reckless neglect, in the way that they treated Elliot Williams in the Tulsa County jail, really constitutes one of the worst civil rights violations in U.S. history,” Smolen told KRMG. Plaintiffs had asked for $51 million in compensatory damages - a million dollars for every hour of that video showing Williams lying on the floor of his cell with a broken neck. Additional punitive damages against former Sheriff Stanley Glanz and the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office, which runs the jail, were at the discretion of the jury.
So this is one of the most unprofessional things I've ever seen. Granted the kid is acting like a little shit, but the officer has got to be above petty antagonism. Incident happens at 9:50 in the video.
He was charged with offical misconduct and arrested for battery. edit: one count of official misconduct, two counts of battery.
Polk Co. undercover detectives arrest 104 in 'Operation March Sadness' prostitution sting http://www.abcactionnews.com/news/r...in-operation-march-sadness-prostitution-sting
After the shooting, an assistant chief repeatedly lied to the police chief, and City Manager Larry Spring ignored vital evidence.
I know some will disagree but that kid needed an ass kicking. Only thing cop did wrong was record it and not let the kid swing on him first.
Not a bad cop story, but my small ass hometown police department just bought an MRAP. To police about 30,000 people. You know, just in case.
Won't lie - I wasn't even a little upset that kid got his ass kicked. The most appalling person in that video is the mom though. She is just a terrible parent.
If the kid wouldn't have been mouthing off then I'd be pissed at the cop. But, he was a complete shit from the start. I don't hit my kids but they always knew there was that possibility that if they got out of line maybe they'd catch an ass kicking and that kept them in line.
If the cop were off duty, cool. By no means am I saying the cop should be talked to that way. Nobody should. That said, the cop can't retaliate with physical violence. Hell I'd be fired from my job if I just verbally went off a client that talked to me sideways. I'm paid to handle the situation like a professional, even if the client isn't. The cop is, too.
If a customer talked to you the way that kid did and you kicked his ass you'd probably be fired. But, that wouldn't change my opinion that the person's whose ass you kicked deserved it. People shouldn't have to deal with shit like that. I am not arguing that the cop shouldn't be fired. I am just saying the kid had that coming. I wouldn't be outraged if the cop just got suspended. We should have a "fear" and respect for authority. If the mom taught that little shit some manners that wouldn't have occurred.