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Police Coverups, Conspiracies, and Cost to Taxpayers

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by ValdostaGatorFan, May 17, 2023.

  1. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    Don't try to file a complaint, they may threaten you with arrest.

    Don't post in on social media, they may raid your house.

    Don't send it to a newspaper, they may raid it and confiscate all the computers.

    Don't film it, they may assault you and throw you in jail for interfering.

    If you're a cop, don't try to report it internally, the administration may fire you.

    If you're a cop, don't try to report to IA, your fellow officers may never provide back up again.
     
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  2. orangeblue_coop

    orangeblue_coop GC Hall of Fame

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    It’s pure insanity when you think about it. The contingent who doesn’t trust the media , the FBI, the government etc will wholeheartedly put their trust in police. Go figure.
     
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  3. philnotfil

    philnotfil GC Hall of Fame

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    New York City police commissioner quietly burying cases against cops. 54 times in his first year as commissioner (the previous commissioner did it 8 times in the same time span).

    How NYPD Commissioner Caban Buries Officers’ Disciplinary Cases — ProPublica

    Since becoming commissioner last July, he has short-circuited cases involving officers accused of wantonly using chokeholds, deploying Tasers and beating protesters with batons. A number of episodes were so serious that the police oversight agency, known as the Civilian Complaint Review Board, concluded the officers likely committed crimes.

    As is typical across the United States, New York’s police commissioner has the final say over officer discipline. Commissioners can and often do overrule civilian oversight boards. But Caban’s actions stand out for ending cases before the public disciplinary process plays out.

    “What the Police Department is doing here is shutting down cases under the cloak of darkness,” said Florence L. Finkle, a former head of the CCRB and current vice president of the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement. Avoiding disciplinary trials “means there’s no opportunity for transparency, no opportunity for the public to weigh in, because nobody knows what’s happening.”

    Indeed, the department does not publish the commissioner’s decisions to retain cases, and the civilian oversight agency makes those details public only months after the fact. Civilians are not told that the Police Department ended their cases.
     
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  4. orangeblue_coop

    orangeblue_coop GC Hall of Fame

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    The rot starts from the top
     
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  5. Gator515151

    Gator515151 GC Hall of Fame

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    How did the resident cop haters ever miss this one?
    WARNING IT IS THE HODGETWINS SO EXPECT SOME FOUL LANGUAGE
     
  6. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    I've seent it. There's tons of stuff I've seent but have not posted. That one reminds me of the circus they had in Homerville with the K9, which is not far from here down Hwy 84.

    I have, however, thought about updating the thread with some recent settlements of incidents I've posted here. I know of 3 off the top of my head that were recently settled.
     
  7. danmanne65

    danmanne65 GC Hall of Fame

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    This problem will continue as long as juries believe anything police officers say. Not saying all cops or even most cops lie but until they are all treated as unreliable witnesses in court cases the problem will continue.

    you hear in the body cams these felon cops tell unconscious people to stop resisting. That makes their actions premeditated.
     
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  8. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    Updates on settlements:

    $8,500,000

    [​IMG]

    Cops left a handcuffed woman in the back of a squad car, parked on the train tracks, that was hit by a train.

    https://www.denver7.com/news/local-...ain-awarded-8-5-million-in-lawsuit-settlement

    ‐‐--------------------------------

    $1,500,000

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    Cop who has been arrested 4 seperate times and the subject of 5 restraining orders assaults handcuffed man, among many other things.

    Handcuffed Colorado man stunned by Taser settles lawsuit for $1.5 million, lawyers say

    --------------------------------------

    $235,000

    [​IMG]
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    Cops raid news outlet and 98 year old co-owner's home. The 98 year old lady died the very next day.

    https://www.kshb.com/news/local-new...police-raid-on-a-kansas-newspaper-for-235-000

     
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  9. wgbgator

    wgbgator Premium Member

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    Seems bad

    Mississippi Town Ran ‘Debtors’ Prisons,’ Justice Department Alleges


     
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  10. gatormonk

    gatormonk GC Hall of Fame

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    20240630_133503.jpg
     
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  11. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    I've been waiting for this thread to get bumped. I have quite a bit to add, but not until power is restored.
     
  12. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    Definitely a lawsuit..


    About 6 months after the DOJ's blistering report on the Pheonix PD, these two cops beat and tase an innocent black man who is deaf and has cerebral palsy. They punched the innocent deaf man about a dozen times and tazed him four times.

    The DOJ report found that Pheonix PD cops use excessive force, resort to force before it was necessary, fail to thoroughly investigate, shows racial bias, and do not know how to interact with people who have disabilities, among many other things. Well, here are several of them in one incident AFTER the report was released. Pheonix has been fighting federal oversight saying that the have everything under control.

    Then these Pigs get up on the stand and lie! Not only that, the prosecutor did not bother to tell the defense team that there was an internal investigation on the two officers.

    Not only that, the prosecution is still charging the innocent man for agg assault on a police officer, even after one officer broke a bone in his hand beating this man, and the other cop probably cut himself applying a choke hold on the innocent man.




    https://www.npr.org/2024/10/17/nx-s...y-tased-deaf-black-man-who-has-cerebral-palsy

    Within seconds of first addressing McAlpin, who is deaf, officer Benjamin Harris jumps out of his vehicle and begins punching McAlpin, followed closely behind by officer Kyle Sue, who presses McAlpin into the ground and repeatedly punches him as well, the footage shows.

    The incident began shortly before at a neighboring Circle K convenience store where employees had called to complain about a white man, identified in the police report as Derek Stevens. The caller said Stevens had been the aggressor in an altercation and was still loitering on the property.

    Upon arrival at the scene, according to the bodycam footage, Harris and Sue briefly speak to Stevens, who then claims that he was instead the victim of an assault at the hands of McAlpin. Stevens claimed McAlpin had punched him and stolen his phone.

    The man points out McAlpin, who is across the street. Without questioning any witnesses on the scene about Stevens' claim, the two officers quickly get in their cars to pursue McAlpin.
     
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  13. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    Hundreds of bad cops in California had their records wiped so they can go get other jobs as police officers. Records were cleaned for things such as excessive force and sexual assault.
    Some were not only had their records cleared, but allowed to go on disability and get their pensions.



    https://www.sfchronicle.com/california/article/clean-record-agreements-investigation-19752768.php

    For decades, California police chiefs and sheriffs have lamented how difficult it is to fire officers and deputies who act with dishonesty or brutality, blaming powerful labor unions and robust employment protections.

    What law enforcement leaders have not revealed, and what has remained a secret until now, is how they have repeatedly turned to an under-the-radar method of getting rid of problem officers — one that not only allows the officers to avoid accountability but, often, to quietly move on to other jobs where they are asked to protect the public.

    For years, dozens of California police agencies have executed “clean-record agreements,” clandestine legal settlements that promise to hide the wrongdoing of an officer in exchange for the officer’s guarantee to leave an agency without a fight, an investigation by the San Francisco Chronicle and UC Berkeley’s Investigative Reporting Program found.

    In the past decade, at least 163 California police agencies have executed clean-record agreements concealing misconduct allegations against 297 officers and deputies. While the precise terms of the agreements varied, most promised to either destroy disciplinary records, hide them in confidential folders or change them to reflect an alternate outcome. In many cases, the deals ensured that only certain information would be released to a potential future employer. At least five officers secured clean-record agreements from multiple agencies.
     
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  14. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    Racketeering in the justice system is not good..

    It looks like about a dozen officers are involved, including a LT with internal affairs. These dudes were writing DUI's, forwarding the accused to a specific attorney, the charges were made to go away, and then were given kickbacks.

    The lawsuit alleges that the city and police chief "did not adequately investigate these allegations, if at all, prior to the involvement of federal authorities.” I guess it makes "investigating ourselves and finding no wrongdoing" a lot easier when you don't even attempt to investigate.





    https://apnews.com/article/dwi-scandal-albuquerque-police-lawsuit-36598656548b0604cca3e3c948cb09cf

    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A civil rights group is suing the city of Albuquerque, its police department and top officials on behalf of a man who was among those arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated and allegedly forced to pay bribes to get the charges dropped.

    The DWI scandal already has mired the police department in New Mexico’s largest city in a federal investigation as well as an internal inquiry. One commander has been fired, several others have resigned and dozens of cases have been dismissed.

    “This lawsuit isn’t just about getting justice for me, it’s about stopping this abuse so no one else has to suffer the way I did,” Sandoval-Smith said in a statement Monday. “I lost my business, my home, and my dignity because of APD corruption. It even caused a deep rift in my family that we may never heal from.”

    The lawsuit states that federal authorities first informed the police department in June of 2022 of an alleged attempt by one of the officers to extort $10,000 from a defendant. It goes on to say that in December 2022, the police department’s Criminal Intelligence Unit received a tip that officers in the DWI Unit were being paid to get cases dismissed and were working in collaboration with a local attorney.
     
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  15. wgbgator

    wgbgator Premium Member

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  16. wgbgator

    wgbgator Premium Member

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  17. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    Near 1 million dollar settlement.

    Cops interrogate a man with mental issues for 17 hours over a murder that didn't happen. He originally called them for help.

    They didn't give him his meds. Kept him awake. They brought his dog into the interrogation room and told them that they might have to put the dog down after witnessing such a gruesome crime. They sent him to a phsyc hospital, and when they found out that the missing father was located, they didn't even bother telling him. No officers were disciplined, in fact, they were promoted. The man tried ending his own life after being pressured to give a false confession.



    Fontana reaches $900K settlement with man who was pressured to confess murder that never happened

    FONTANA, Calif. -- Tom Perez called the local police non-emergency line to report his elderly father missing. Thirty-six hours later, Perez was on a psychiatric hold in a hospital, having been pressured into confessing he killed his dad and trying to take his own life.

    That was six years ago, in August 2018. His hometown of Fontana, California, paid $900,000 to settle his claims against the police, but Perez says no one from the city has ever apologized. Nor is there any indication there was an internal investigation into why detective after detective, supervisor after supervisor, allowed the questioning of Perez to continue for hour after hour.

    Since then, many of the police officers involved have been promoted. And Perez feels there has still been no explanation for why he was treated so badly.

    "Perez's mental state, among other factors, made him a vulnerable individual," Judge Gee wrote. "He was sleep deprived, mentally ill, and, significantly, undergoing symptoms of withdrawal from his psychiatric medications. He was berated, worn down, and pressured into a false confession after 17 hours of questioning. (The officers) did this with full awareness of his compromised mental and physical state and need for his medications."
     
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  18. ValdostaGatorFan

    ValdostaGatorFan GC Hall of Fame

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    The least shocking thing I've seen today, lol. Definitely sketch worthy. This is up there with cops shooting themselves in the classroom.
     
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