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Author Topic: Please post all of the completely insane COPWATCH stories here  (Read 129608 times)
Freeski
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« Reply #920 on: October 25, 2011, 07:17:59 PM »

Holy crap! Shocked

So, who owns who?
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"He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it." Martin Luther King, Jr.
Jordan
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« Reply #921 on: October 25, 2011, 07:23:15 PM »

Houston Police DWI technician blows the whistle on serious problems with validity of testing. Instead of fixing problem they threaten whistle blower.

The Harris County district attorney says she doesn't trust the Houston Police Department to handle DWI testing.
Pat Lykos' comments come days after we reported one of her prosecutors was ejected from a grand jury room ahead of testimony about those BAT vans.

Lykos tells us she still doesn't know what went wrong inside that grand jury room last week that nearly led to the arrest of two of her top assistants, despite the fact one of them was in the room with us during the interview. What she does know is that she no longer wants HPD supervising its own DWI vans.

"That's what perturbs me," she said.

Lykos told us Monday she's done trusting HPD to tell her the truth about DWI testing.

"We were never informed there were questions about whether the tests were valid," Lykos said.

For months, we've told you about the reported problems with the police department's mobile breath testing labs known as BAT vans.

13 Undercover reported about maintenance problems in March. A former HPD technician testified in court about potentially bad evidence in July.

Now it's nearly November and the DA says HPD still hasn't owned up to her about any of the problems. On Monday afternoon -- before she even told the chief of police -- she told us she wants DPS to take over the BAT vans.

"Do you trust the results coming out of the BAT vans?" we asked Lykos.

"I want the Texas Department of Public Safety to supervise the technicians so that we can be assured that everything is done according to protocol," she replied.

All of that addresses the larger problem of potentially sketchy evidence that could wrongly convict someone, but doesn't address the grand jury grandstanding that almost led to an imprisoned prosecutor.

"It came as a total surprise," Lykos said.

We told you Friday about Lykos' top assistants who refused to leave a grand jury room. The grand jury was about to hear from a witness about the BAT van issues, someone who might have even said that HPD or the DA's office didn't handle the evidence correctly. The prosecutors didn't leave until a bailiff threatened to arrest them.

On Monday, nearly a week after the incident and a few days after it was our lead story, she couldn't tell us what went down.

"I don't know," Lykos said.

"Oh, come on," we pressed.

"I don't," she replied.

The assistant was just off camera, but she didn't want him to take her place.

That grand jury is still working and may call more witnesses outside the presence of a prosecutor.

"Do you believe your office is being investigated by this grand jury?" we asked Lykos.

"I don't think so," she said.

"Have you done anything wrong?"

"Of course not."

We asked the Houston Police Department if the DA had asked them to give up supervision of the BAT vans and if they were willing to do it. They sent us the statement below:

"We acknowledged several months ago we were addressing maintenance issues pertaining to the bat vans and corrected those concerns. We then went a step further and asked scientific personnel at the Texas Department of Public Safety to take a thorough look at our intox equipment used in the vans to make sure it meets all standards."

http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/story?section=news/in_focus&id=8403864
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Effie Trinket
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« Reply #922 on: October 25, 2011, 09:06:26 PM »

I heard MADD was a CIA front.

People who viciously violate the Constitution like this should be physically beaten to hell, and forced to rescind their ultra fascist illegal "laws".  These laws can burn in hell and should be met with the ultimate "f**k the hell off" response.  I hope people start smashing through illegal, unconstitutional roadblocks at 60 mph or more and send these F*CKS a message.  I'll be God damned to hell if anyone EVER makes me comply with a Nazi piece of shit f*cking checkpoint.  Don't these petty power shitbag thugs called "LE" realize they are slaves themselves?  Don't they get it that the fed/Bilderberg, Committee of 300 are in full spectrum "destroy America" mode right now?  All of these f*cking cops are going to end up getting gunned down in the end by RAND Corporations Uzbekistan paramilitary troops they will be bringing to the U.S. to really enforce their martial law tyranny, so they better wake the f*ck up and realize that there is no such thing "siding with" the military industrial complex and financier oligarchs.
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filletboy
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« Reply #923 on: October 25, 2011, 09:51:22 PM »

SOLUTION


DON'T DRINK AND DRIVE


My life may depend on it


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Jordan
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« Reply #924 on: October 26, 2011, 12:28:33 PM »

http://youtu.be/9lbbWAgBy7E
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global_fiefdom
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« Reply #925 on: October 26, 2011, 12:51:23 PM »

My God. (disturbing video)

At least people are standing up for what they believe.

Lucky for me on 9/11 when i passed out my veterans for 9/11 truth and peace flyers,
no one bothered me.

a few weeks later and it would have been a different story.

goes to show, independent action is better than showing up at things planned on facebook by the gov't!!

not to bash the occupy people... but i have a feeling social networking has a rather huge influence on the movement and it's hard to track down sources.
Dig and others were pointing out provacateurs from Egypt's uprising taking part in OWS and that bothered me!
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Jordan
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« Reply #926 on: October 28, 2011, 09:56:51 AM »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yY2cCPW3H7g

The ACLU of Southern California sued the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and several of its deputies Thursday alleging they harassed, detained and improperly searched photographers taking pictures legally in public places.

The federal lawsuit alleges the Sheriff's Department and deputies "have repeatedly" subjected photographers "to detention, search and interrogation simply because they took pictures" from public streets of places such as Metro turnstiles, oil refineries or near a Long Beach courthouse.

"Photography is not a crime. It's protected 1st Amendment expression," said Peter Bibring, senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California. "It violates the Constitution's core protections for sheriff’s deputies to detain and search people who are doing nothing wrong. To single them out for such treatment while they’re pursuing a constitutionally protected activity is doubly wrong."

Bibring said the policy and practices of the Sheriff's Department reflect a widespread misuse of "suspicious activity reporting" under the auspices of Homeland Security and counterterrorism. Similar suits have been filed in several other states.

Los Angeles County sheriff's Capt. Mike Parker said it is a deputy's duty to ask questions.

"Should we really ignore suspicious activity?" Parker asked. "We have an obligation to the public to answer questions and we are going to ask people why are you taking that picture. It is our duty to protect the public."

Parker said the department has not had a chance to review the lawsuit and could not answer specific questions about the incidents.

Thursday's suit was filed on behalf of three photographers, who among them have been detained or ordered not to take pictures on at least six occasions.

Professional photographer Shawn Nee was detained and searched Oct. 31, 2009, for shooting images at the turnstiles of the Los Angeles subway system. Nee was shooting newly installed turnstiles at the Metro Red Line's Hollywood and Western station when a deputy asked why he was taking pictures. Nee told the deputy he was not doing anything, the deputy warned him that photography was prohibited at the station because it is a terrorist target.
"Al Qaeda would love to buy your pictures, so I want to know if you are in cahoots with Al Qaeda to sell these pictures to them for terrorist purposes," Deputy Richard Gylfie then reportedly told him.

The deputy grabbed Nee, pushed him against a wall, searched him and lectured him about terrorism, the lawsuit alleges. He also threatened to forward Nee's name to counterterrorism so it could be added to an FBI "hit list"

The incident was captured on video. According to the suit, the deputy was not disciplined despite a complaint.

Earlier this year, deputies ordered Nee not to photograph on the sidewalk outside the W Hotel at Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Greggory Moore, a reporter who works for the Long Beach Post, was on a public sidewalk taking pictures of passing drivers for a story on Distracted Driving Awareness month in June when several sheriff's deputies surrounded, frisked and interrogated him. They said that because he was taking pictures across the street from the Long Beach Superior Court building, his behavior was suspicious.

"I was surrounded by deputies and frisked just blocks from my house, just for taking photographs in the middle of the day on a public sidewalk," Moore said. According to the suit, Moore was forced to show deputies his photos to support his story. Later, a sheriff’s sergeant told Moore the investigation was related to terrorism. In response to a letter from the National Press Photographers Assn., Sheriff Lee Baca defended the deputies' actions.

In another incident, deputies detained and searched Shane Quentin, a photographer with a master's in fine arts from UC Irvine while he was taking pictures of brilliantly lighted refineries in South Los Angeles on Jan. 21. Deputies frisked Quentin and placed him in the back of a police cruiser for about 45 minutes before releasing him. Two years before, Quentin had been ordered twice by deputies to stop taking photos of the refineries, according to the suit.

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court Central District and asks that the court order the Sheriff’s Department to stop detaining people solely on the fact that they are taking pictures. It also seeks compensatory and punitive damages.

Over the last several years, many police departments have instituted "suspicious activity reporting" programs designed to train officers to report certain activities in an effort to detect early surveillance by terrorist groups of potential targets.

In addition to the named plaintiffs, the suit alleges that several other photographers were detained for taking pictures of public buildings. Freelance photographer Ted Soqui was detained on the sidewalk outside the downtown jail while taking pictures for an L.A. Weekly story on jail abuse. Similarly, Catherine Dent was taking exterior photos of Men’s Central Jail for a school project and was detained and questioned.

“Photographers in Los Angeles and nationwide are increasingly subject to harassment by police officers,” said Mickey H. Osterreicher, general counsel for the National Press Photographers Assn. “Safety and security concerns should not be used as a pretext to chill free speech and expression.”



http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/10/aclu-sues-.html
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Georgiacopguy
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'Cause it's a revolution for your mind...K?!


« Reply #927 on: October 28, 2011, 10:10:31 AM »

So harass legitimate photographers, meanwhile, three Russians are detained, arrested, then allowed to leave on their own recognizance, never to be seen again... That's effective police work there. (Insert snarky sarcasm)
http://www2.wsav.com/news/2010/sep/09/3-men-arrested-outside-effingham-power-plant-ar-809473/
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The resistance starts here. Unfortunately, the entire thing is moving beyond the intellectual infowar. I vow I will not make an overt rush at violent authority, until authority makes it's violent rush at me and you. I will not falter, I will not die in this course. For that is how they win.
Jordan
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« Reply #928 on: October 28, 2011, 10:25:12 AM »

Police chiefs 'authorised undercover police officers to give false evidence in court'
The claims led to Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary delaying a report into undercover police tactics at the last minute.

It had been due to be published today and was thought to be critical of the police.

Lawyers for a convicted protester claim a Metropolitan Police officer called Jim Boyling, posing as an activist, was prosecuted alongside their client and lied under oath to conceal his true identity.

Solicitors from the law firm Bindmans claim Boyling pretended to be Jim Sutton between 1995 and 2000 and joined the non-violent organisation Reclaim the Streets, the Guardian newspaper reported.

As part of his role, Bindmans claim, he was prosecuted at Horseferry Road magistrates court in London in 1997 for disorderly behaviour in a three-day trial.
He maintained his fiction during the entire prosecution, they allege, giving a false name and occupation and lying under oath.

Bindmans are appealing on behalf of John Jordan, an activist who was convicted of assaulting a police officer and given a one-year conditional discharge.

They claim Boyling would potentially have been able to use his knowledge of the activists’ defence to boost the prosecution’s case.

It has previously been claimed that Boyling married an activist he met while undercover in the environmental protest movement, and that he went on to have children with her.

Peter Black, another police officer who worked in the same undercover unit as Boyling, said the case was not unique.

Black said occasional prosecutions for regular involvement in public disorder were allowed to go ahead because it helped to build their credibility with activists.

A spokesman for the Met Police said the force was already reviewing issues regarding the deployment of undercover officers.

He added: “The Metropolitan Police Service acknowledges that these are serious matters and is continuing to review the situation, and will take account of any additional information that becomes available.”

A spokeswoman for HMIC said their report had been delayed to “consider the relevance” of the new claims.

She added: “We will be writing to The Guardian and Newsnight [which also ran the story] to invite them to provide any additional information they may have.”

Three different inquiries have been launched following the controversy surrounding Mark Kennedy, a Metropolitan police officer who spent seven years working undercover before turning against his seniors.

Some of the HMIC materiel expected to be published on Thursday was to have examined his role and those of his controllers.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/8837724/Police-chiefs-authorised-undercover-police-officers-to-give-false-evidence-in-court.html
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Jordan
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« Reply #929 on: October 28, 2011, 09:45:46 PM »

http://youtu.be/OZLyUK0t0vQ

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global_fiefdom
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« Reply #930 on: October 29, 2011, 06:14:23 PM »

So harass legitimate photographers, meanwhile, three Russians are detained, arrested, then allowed to leave on their own recognizance, never to be seen again... That's effective police work there. (Insert snarky sarcasm)
http://www2.wsav.com/news/2010/sep/09/3-men-arrested-outside-effingham-power-plant-ar-809473/
the russians have deep pockets, moscow can afford to bribe anyone...

@@
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Jordan
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« Reply #931 on: October 30, 2011, 06:10:37 PM »

Cops Mock Poor People, Calls Prosecutors "Pieces Of S--t," Claim Ticket-Fixing Is Just The Way It Is.


As 16 NYPD officers were arraigned at a Bronx courthouse yesterday to face charges related to the department's massive ticket-fixing probe, around 500 off-duty police officers, including paralyzed NYPD officer Steven McDonald, showed up to voice their support for "professional privilege." According to the Times, the officers shoved away television cameras and jeered at people receiving public assistance at a benefits center across the street. According to the Daily News, some of those assembled shouted "you piece of sh*t!" at prosecutors. Ahh, the sweet sounds of CPR.

While many off-duty officers and PBA members held signs that bore slogans of, "It's a Courtesy Not a Crime," ticket-fixing charges weren't the only ones aired in court: grand larceny, drug charges and unrelated corruption were also found in the probe. Four of the policemen charged helped a man escape assault charges. Flatscreen TV-loving Jose Ramos, who is at the center of the probe and was the only cop charged who remained in jail on $500,000 bond, was caught on a wiretap saying, "I stopped caring about the law a long time ago."

When some Bronx residents, who were waiting in line for government assistance next door, shouted "Fix our tickets!" the officers and supporters responded with a ugly chant of "E.B.T." "To be ridiculing people in the welfare line across the street doesn't endear you to the public eye," an unnamed official said.

"It's hard to see an upside in the way the anger was expressed, especially in Bronx County, where you already have a hard row to hoe in terms of building rapport with the community," a professor of police studies at John Jay College tells the paper. "The Police Department is a very angry work force, and that is something that should concern people, because it translates into hostile interactions with people." Indeed, it's been recently reported that morale in the NYPD is at rock-bottom due to a litany of scandals.

Daily News columnist Joanna Molloy called the incident yesteday "a disgrace," writing that it was "ridiculous" to refer to ticket-fixing as a "courtesy" because "the cops who erased parking tickets did so mostly for their girlfriends, their cousins and their buddies, leaving the rest of us to pay up." She continues: "When 16 cops act as if they are above the law—and 500 more turn up to support them…they ruin it for the rest of the 35,000 cops on the force."

Mayor Bloomberg took the same tact in his radio broadcast on Friday, saying "it's a tiny percentage of the people" who serve in the NYPD that were indicted. Interestingly enough, even that "tiny" group of people got something that even eluded Dominique Strauss-Kahn: they got their perp walk "fixed," and were loaded into black vans, away from the media's lenses.

http://gothamist.com/2011/10/29/cops_mock_poor_people_calls_prosecu.php#photo-1
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Jordan
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« Reply #932 on: October 30, 2011, 06:14:03 PM »

Single mother is left handcuffed to a desk in Brooklyn precinct after being taken from the hospital for a bullet wound.
COURT STREET — A Brooklyn woman who was shot in the leg and then detained for five days by NYPD officers who demanded that she confess her shooter’s identity is now suing the city.

Takesha Griffin, 35, of Brownsville, announced Thursday with her attorney Sanford Rubenstein that she plans to sue the city for $5 million for her ordeal, during which she was left handcuffed and helpless, urinating and menstruating on herself in front of male prisoners, she claims. Well-known Court Street attorney Rubenstein said yesterday that a Notice of Claim was filed with the city earlier this week.

Police were urging Griffin to confess that it was the same male friend who drove her to the hospital who had also shot her, which Griffin said was a “lie” and an experience like “The Twilight Zone.”

Griffin says she suffered emotional trauma and mental anguish as well as a loss of earnings capacity due to the incident.

“What happened to Takesha Griffin is something that would happen in a fascist state, not in America,” Rubenstein stated.

Criminal defendants have a constitutional right to be brought before a judge within 24 hours of being arrested. But Griffin didn’t get to Central Booking beneath Brooklyn Criminal Court until five days had elapsed.

Griffin, the mother of a 9-year-old son, was getting out of a friend’s pickup truck around 4 a.m. on Sept. 3 a block away from her apartment when she was hit in the leg by a stray bullet, she says.

Griffin said she heard a smack, felt a pain in her leg, then saw that her tights were crumpled inside where a bullet had struck her leg. She tugged the fabric, popping the bullet out, and then began bleeding profusely. Her friend then drove her to Brookdale Hospital.

Because a shooting was involved, police came to the hospital and found that Griffin had an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in court in 2009 for a disorderly conduct summons. They handcuffed her to a gurney and brought her to the 73rd Precinct after her wound was bandaged, she claims.

Detectives allegedly believed Griffin’s friend was the shooter, and that there had been a lovers’ quarrel. She insists her friend never had a gun and is not her lover — he is a gay man, she claimed, with whom she went to a gay club earlier.

The friend offered to submit to a lie-detector test and have his hands tested for gun-shot residue to prove that he wasn’t the shooter. He was released that morning, but Griffin was not.

Griffin says she was held in a holding cell until 1 p.m. that day, then allegedly brought to the precinct’s front desk and handcuffed to a bench for the next three days straight.

Griffin told the Daily News that she urinated on herself when she was refused an escort to the bathroom, was denied a sanitary napkin, and was only fed one McDonald’s hamburger each day. When she complained about food, a cop sarcastically suggested she order takeout.

On the next day, another officer allegedly mocked her, asking if she had changed her story yet and saying, “I guess you like it here.”

For two additional days, Griffin was held in a holding cell in isolation, she says.

On Sept. 7, Griffin’s mother brought her clean clothes, a sandwich, a toothbrush, soap, and a newspaper. Even though Brooklyn Criminal Court was open through the weekend when the arrest occurred, Griffin claims she still wasn’t brought to the court to be arraigned until Thursday, Sept. 8.

Court employees determined that Griffin’s outstanding warrant was erroneous, as well. Griffin had, in fact, appeared in court on the disorderly conduct violation, but due to a clerical error, her court appearance had not been recorded. Griffin was then released from police custody.

The notice of claim states that police officers have continued to call Griffin and drive by her home, harassing her, while the NYPD’s own Internal Affairs Bureau investigates the alleged misconduct. The notice also alleges that the officers are already trying to cover up their conduct.

http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categories/category.php?category_id=4&id=47060
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Jordan
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« Reply #933 on: October 30, 2011, 06:16:16 PM »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jry92dhOtaw
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Freeski
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« Reply #934 on: October 30, 2011, 06:33:03 PM »

So annoying...

This video may contain content that is inappropriate for some users, as determined by the video uploader (Learn More).

To view this video please verify you are 18 or older by signing in or signing up.
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"He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it." Martin Luther King, Jr.
Jordan
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« Reply #935 on: November 21, 2011, 06:57:30 AM »

The nation’s largest private prison company, received $74 million of taxpayers’ money to run immigration detention centers.

Last year the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), the nation’s largest private prison company, received $74 million of taxpayers’ money to run immigration detention centers. Their largest facility in Lumpkin, Georgia, receives $200 a night for each of the 2,000 detainees it holds, and rakes in yearly profits between $35 million and $50 million.

Prisoners held in this remote facility depend on the prison’s phones to communicate with their lawyers and loved ones. Exploiting inmates’ need, CCA charges detainees here $5 per minute to make phone calls. Yet the prison only pays inmates who work at the facility $1 a day. At that rate, it would take five days to pay for just one minute.

Watch this report on the conditions Stewart detainees face:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81dch5uQs7M

CCA’s abuse doesn’t stop at outrageously priced phone services. One woman reported that her diabetic husband does not receive enough food, so she has to deposit money for him to buy more. Occupy Nashville recently protested outside of the company by holding a “human auction” to illustrate how CCA profits off of human suffering.

As Alternet points out, in the past few years, CCA has spent $14.8 million “lobbying for anti-immigration laws to ensure they have continuous access to fresh inmates and keep their money racket going.” Recent anti-immigration laws in Alabama and Georgia keep their facilities full and CCA profits high.

Since more prisoners translate into more profit, private prisons like CCA continually push lawmakers to enact harsher policies and longer sentences, according to a report by Justice Policy Institute (JPI).

http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/732179/private_prison_charges_inmates_%245_a_minute_for_phone_calls_while_they_work_for_%241_a_day/#paragraph3
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Overcast
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« Reply #936 on: November 21, 2011, 09:00:53 AM »

SOLUTION


DON'T DRINK AND DRIVE


My life may depend on it




But your life may even more depend on the government stopping it's concept of a PrisonPlanet and pushing the people day after day - eventually, that will crack wide open and we won't have a government that can control the people anymore.

People rioting aren't making ammo for the police, they aren't making power for the offices, they aren't making tires for the trucks, driving trucks to move goods, or moving cargo containers off the boats at port.
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It is when a people forget God, that tyrants forge their chains. ~ Patrick Henry

Our founding fathers, if they met the current politicians in office; would either kick their asses good or just shoot them dead. ~Me
Jordan
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« Reply #937 on: November 21, 2011, 08:22:38 PM »

“If you’re not doing anything wrong, you’re not driving a stolen car, you’re not committing a crime,” Alessi said, “then you don’t have anything to worry about.”

An armed robber burst into a Northeast Washington market, scuffled with the cashier, and then shot him and the clerk’s father, who also owned the store. The killer sped off in a silver Pontiac, but a witness was able to write down the license plate number.

Police figured out the name of the suspect very quickly. But locating and arresting him took a little-known investigative tool: a vast system that tracks the comings and goings of anyone driving around the District.

Scores of cameras across the city capture 1,800 images a minute and download the information into a rapidly expanding archive that can pinpoint people’s movements all over town.

Police entered the suspect’s license plate number into that database and learned that the Pontiac was on a street in Southeast. Police soon arrested Christian Taylor, who had been staying at a friend’s home, and charged him with two counts of first-degree murder. His trial is set for January.

More than 250 cameras in the District and its suburbs scan license plates in real time, helping police pinpoint stolen cars and fleeing killers. But the program quietly has expanded beyond what anyone had imagined even a few years ago.

With virtually no public debate, police agencies have begun storing the information from the cameras, building databases that document the travels of millions of vehicles.

Nowhere is that more prevalent than in the District, which has more than one plate-reader per square mile, the highest concentration in the nation. Police in the Washington suburbs have dozens of them as well, and local agencies plan to add many more in coming months, creating a comprehensive dragnet that will include all the approaches into the District.

“It never stops,” said Capt. Kevin Reardon, who runs Arlington County’s plate reader program. “It just gobbles up tag information. One of the big questions is, what do we do with the information?”

Police departments are grappling with how long to store the information and how to balance privacy concerns against the value the data provide to investigators. The data are kept for three years in the District, two years in Alexandria, a year in Prince George’s County and a Maryland state database, and about a month in many other suburban areas.

“That’s quite a large database of innocent people’s comings and goings,” said Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst for the American Civil Liberties Union’s technology and liberty program. “The government has no business collecting that kind of information on people without a warrant.”

But police say the tag readers can give them a critical jump on a child abductor, information about when a vehicle left — or entered — a crime scene, and the ability to quickly identify a suspected terrorist’s vehicle as it speeds down the highway, perhaps to an intended target.

Having the technology during the Washington area sniper shootings in 2002 might have stopped the attacks sooner, detectives said, because police could have checked whether any particular car was showing up at each of the shooting sites.

“It’s a perfect example of how they’d be useful,” said Lt. T.J. Rogers, who is responsible for the 26 tag readers maintained by the Fairfax County police. “We see a lot of potential in it.”

The plate readers are different from red-light or speed cameras, which issue traffic tickets and are tools for deterrence and enforcement. The readers are an investigative tool, capturing a picture of every license plate that passes by and instantly analyzing them against a database filled with cars wanted by police.

Police can also plug any license plate number into the database and, as long as it passed a camera, determine where that vehicle has been and when. Detectives also can enter a be-on-the-lookout into the database, and the moment that license plate passes a detector, they get an alert.

It’s that precision and the growing ubiquity of the technology that has libertarians worried. In Northern Virginia recently, a man reported his wife missing, prompting police to enter her plate number into the system.

They got a hit at an apartment complex, and when they got there, officers spotted her car and a note on her windshield that said, in essence, “Don’t tow, I’m visiting apartment 3C.” Officers knocked on the door of that apartment, and she came out of the bedroom. They advised her to call her husband.

A new tool in the arsenal

Even though they are relatively new, the tag readers, which cost about $20,000 each, are now as widely used as other high-tech tools police employ to prevent and solve crimes, including surveillance cameras, gunshot recognition sensors and mobile finger­print scanners.

License plate readers can capture numbers across four lanes of traffic on cars zooming up to 150 mph.

“The new technology makes our job a lot easier and the bad guys’ job a lot harder,” said D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier.

The technology first was used by the postal service to sort letters. Units consist of two cameras — one that snaps digital photographs and another that uses an optical infrared sensor to decipher the numbers and letters. The camera captures a color image of the vehicle while the sensor “reads” the license plate and transfers the data to a computer.

When stored over time, the collected data can be used instantaneously or can help with complex analysis, such as whether a car appears to have been followed by another car or if cars are traveling in a convoy.

Police also have begun using them as a tool to prevent crime. By positioning them in nightclub parking lots, for example, police can collect information about who is there. If members of rival gangs appear at a club, police can send patrol cars there to squelch any flare-ups before they turn violent. After a crime, police can gather a list of potential witnesses in seconds.

“It’s such a valuable tool, it’s hard not to jump on it and explore all the things it can do for law enforcement,” said Kevin Davis, assistant chief of police in Prince George’s County.

The readers have been used across the country for several years, but the program is far more sophisticated in the Washington region. The District has 73 readers; 38 of them sit stationary and the rest are attached to police cars. D.C. officials say every police car will have one some day.

The District’s license plate cameras gather more than a million data points a month, and officers make an average of an arrest a day directly from the plate readers, said Tom Wilkins, executive director of the D.C. police department’s intelligence fusion division, which oversees the plate reader program. Between June and September, police found 51 stolen cars using the technology.

Police do not publicly disclose the locations of the readers. And while D.C. law requires that the footage on crime surveillance cameras be deleted after 10 days unless there’s an investigative reason to keep it, there are no laws governing how or when Washington area police can use the tag reader technology. The only rule is that it be used for law enforcement purposes.

“That’s typical with any emerging technology,” Wilkins said. “Even though it’s a tool we’ve had for five years, as it becomes more apparent and widely used and more relied upon, people will begin to scrutinize it.”

Legal concerns

Such scrutiny is happening now at the U.S. Supreme Court with a related technology: GPS surveillance. At issue is whether police can track an individual vehicle with an attached GPS device.

Orin Kerr, a law professor at George Washington University who has been closely watching the Supreme Court case, said the license plate technology probably would pass constitutional muster because there is no reasonable expectation of privacy on public streets.

But, Kerr said, the technology’s silent expansion has allowed the government to know things it couldn’t possibly know before and that the use of such massive amounts of data needs safeguards.

“It’s big brother, and the question is, is it big brother we want, or big brother that we don’t want?” Kerr said. “This technology could be used for good and it could be used for bad. I think we need a conversation about whether and how this technology is used. Who gets the information and when? How long before the information is deleted? All those questions need scrutiny.”

Should someone access the database for something other than a criminal investigation, they could track people doing legal but private things. Having a comprehensive database could mean government access to information about who attended a political event, visited a medical clinic, or went to Alcoholics Anonymous or Planned Parenthood.

Maryland and Virginia police departments are expanding their tag reader programs and by the end of the year expect to have every major entry and exit point to the District covered.

“We’re putting fixed sites up in the capital area,” said Sgt. Julio Valcarcel, who runs the Maryland State Police’s program, which now has 19 mobile units and one fixed unit along a major highway, capturing roughly 27 million reads per year. “Several sites are going online over the winter.”

Some jurisdictions store the information in a large networked database; others retain it only in the memory of each individual reader’s computer, then delete it after several weeks as new data overwrite it.

A George Mason University study last year found that 37 percent of large police agencies in the United States now use license plate reader technology and that a significant number of other agencies planned to have it by the end of 2011. But the survey found that fewer than 30 percent of the agencies using the tool had researched any legal implications.

There also has been scant legal precedent. In Takoma Park, police have two tag readers that they have been using for two years. Police Chief Ronald A. Ricucci said he was amazed at how quickly the units could find stolen cars. When his department first got them, he looked around at other departments to see what kind of rules and regulations they had.

“There wasn’t much,” Ricucci said. “A lot of people were using them and didn’t have policies on them yet.”

Finding stolen cars faster

The technology first came to the Washington region in 2004 as a pilot program. During an early test, members of the Washington Area Vehicle Enforcement Unit recovered eight cars, found 12 stolen license plates and made three arrests in a single shift. Prince George’s police bought several units to help combat the county’s crippling car theft and carjacking problem. It worked.

“We recover cars very quickly now. In previous times that was not the case,” said Prince George’s Capt. Edward Davey, who is in charge of the county’s program. “Before, they’d be dumped on the side of the road somewhere for a while.”

Now Prince George’s has 45 units and is likely to get more soon.

“The more we use them, the more we realize there’s a whole lot more on the investigative end of them,” Davey said. “We are starting to evolve. Investigators are starting to realize how to use them.”

Arlington police cars equipped with the readers regularly drive through the parking garage at the Pentagon City mall looking for stolen cars, checking hundreds of them in a matter of minutes as they cruise up and down the aisles. In Prince William County, where there are 12 mobile readers, the units have been used to locate missing people and recover stolen cars.

Unlike in the District, in most suburban jurisdictions, the units are only attached to police cars on patrol, and there aren’t enough of them to create a comprehensive net.

Virginia State Police have 42 units for the entire state, most of them focused on Northern Virginia, Richmond and the Tidewater area, and as of now have no fixed locations. There is also no central database, so each unit collects information on its own and compares it against a daily download of wanted vehicles from the FBI and the state.

But the state police are looking into fixed locations that could capture as many as 100 times more vehicles, 24 hours a day, with the potential to blanket the interstates.

“Now, we’re not getting everything — we’re fishing,” said Sgt. Robert Alessi, a 23-year veteran who runs the state police’s program. “Fixed cameras will help us use a net instead of one fishing pole with one line in the water waiting to get a nibble.”

Beyond the technology’s ability to track suspects and non-criminals alike, it has expanded beyond police work. Tax collectors in Arlington bought their own units and use the readers to help collect money owed to the county. Chesterfield County, in Virginia, uses a reader it purchased to collect millions of dollars in delinquent car taxes each year, comparing the cars on the road against the tax rolls.

Police across the region say that they are careful with the information and that they are entrusted with many pieces of sensitive information about citizens, including arrest records and Social Security numbers.

“If you’re not doing anything wrong, you’re not driving a stolen car, you’re not committing a crime,” Alessi said, “then you don’t have anything to worry about.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/license-plate-readers-a-useful-tool-for-police-comes-with-privacy-concerns/2011/11/18/gIQAuEApcN_print.html
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Jordan
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« Reply #938 on: December 02, 2011, 02:25:07 AM »

75 Years in Prison For Videotaping Police

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80DbxSZ_FB8


Judge Rejects Eavesdropping Charges for Recording Police
http://reason.com/blog/2011/09/20/illinois-judge-rejects-eavesdr

Michael Allison, an Illinois man who faced a potential sentence of 75 years in prison for recording police officers and attempting to tape his own trial, caught a break last week when a state judge declared the charges unconstitutional. "A statute intended to prevent unwarranted intrusions into a citizen’s privacy cannot be used as a shield for public officials who cannot assert a comparable right of privacy in their public duties," wrote Circuit Court Judge David Frankland. "Such action impedes the free flow of information concerning public officials and violates the First Amendment right to gather such information."

Allison, who figures prominently in Radley Balko's January cover story about "The War on Cameras," recorded his interactions with police officers during a long-running dispute over cars he was working on at his home in Bridgeport and his mother's home in Robinson. When he was cited for violating Robinson's "eyesore" ordinance, he brought a tape recorder to his trial because he had been informed that there would be no official transcript of the proceedings. The judge accused Allison of violating her privacy, thereby committing a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison under the state's eavesdropping law; she threw in four more charges after discovering that he had recorded his police encounters as well.

Judge Frankland ruled that Allison had a First Amendment right to record the police officers and court employees. And while a ban on recording devices in the courtroom might be justified, he said, the eavesdropping charge was inappropriate. As applied in this case, Frankland said, the eavesdropping law "includes conduct that is unrelated to the statute's purpose and is not rationally related to the evil the legislation sought to prohibit. For example, a defendant recording his case in a courtroom has nothing to do with an intrusion into a citizen's privacy but with distraction."

A few days before Frankland's ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit heard a First Amendment challenge to the eavesdropping statute, one of the country's strictest. Last month a Chicago jury acquitted a woman who was charged with eavesdropping after she recorded a conversation with internal affairs officers to document that they were encouraging her to drop a sexual harassment complaint. Also last month, in a case involving a Boston man charged with eavesdropping for capturing an arrest on his cell phone, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit said such recording is a "basic and well-established liberty safeguarded by the First Amendment." Yesterday I noted a California case where exercising that right led to a California man's acquittal.

The 1st Circuit's decision is here (PDF). Reason.tv covered camera-shy cops (without triggering any felony charges) in May:
Michael Allison, an Illinois man who faced a potential sentence of 75 years in prison for recording police officers and attempting to tape his own trial, caught a break last week when a state judge declared the charges unconstitutional. "A statute intended to prevent unwarranted intrusions into a citizen’s privacy cannot be used as a shield for public officials who cannot assert a comparable right of privacy in their public duties," wrote Circuit Court Judge David Frankland. "Such action impedes the free flow of information concerning public officials and violates the First Amendment right to gather such information."

Allison, who figures prominently in Radley Balko's January cover story about "The War on Cameras," recorded his interactions with police officers during a long-running dispute over cars he was working on at his home in Bridgeport and his mother's home in Robinson. When he was cited for violating Robinson's "eyesore" ordinance, he brought a tape recorder to his trial because he had been informed that there would be no official transcript of the proceedings. The judge accused Allison of violating her privacy, thereby committing a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison under the state's eavesdropping law; she threw in four more charges after discovering that he had recorded his police encounters as well.

Judge Frankland ruled that Allison had a First Amendment right to record the police officers and court employees. And while a ban on recording devices in the courtroom might be justified, he said, the eavesdropping charge was inappropriate. As applied in this case, Frankland said, the eavesdropping law "includes conduct that is unrelated to the statute's purpose and is not rationally related to the evil the legislation sought to prohibit. For example, a defendant recording his case in a courtroom has nothing to do with an intrusion into a citizen's privacy but with distraction."

A few days before Frankland's ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit heard a First Amendment challenge to the eavesdropping statute, one of the country's strictest. Last month a Chicago jury acquitted a woman who was charged with eavesdropping after she recorded a conversation with internal affairs officers to document that they were encouraging her to drop a sexual harassment complaint. Also last month, in a case involving a Boston man charged with eavesdropping for capturing an arrest on his cell phone, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit said such recording is a "basic and well-established liberty safeguarded by the First Amendment." Yesterday I noted a California case where exercising that right led to a California man's acquittal.

The 1st Circuit's decision is here (PDF). Reason.tv covered camera-shy cops (without triggering any felony charges) in May:

http://youtu.be/LY0MUARqisM


and the state is appealing it.
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Jordan
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« Reply #939 on: December 14, 2011, 08:54:19 PM »

California's attorney general won't investigate the UC Davis pepper spraying incident.


The California Attorney General’s Office has declined to investigate the pepper-spraying of students at UC Davis.

Both the Yolo County District Attorney and Sheriff had requested the Attorney General’s help in investigating the November 18 incident where a campus police officer used pepper-spray on a group of sitting protesters.

The pepper-spraying prompted large protests and calls for the Davis chancellor’s resignation after videos of the incident went viral.

The District Attorney said they had requested help from the Attorney General because of “significant and statewide issues involved.”

<<Read: Letter to AG from Yolo DA and Sheriff

<<Read: Response From Attorney General re: UCD Pepper-Spraying

The Attorney General’s Office cited several factors in their denial of the request including the fact that the Governor had already called for a review of the event and their confidence in the District Attorney’s ability to handle the case.

http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2011/12/14/state-attorney-general-declines-request-to-review-ucd-pepper-spraying-incident/
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« Reply #940 on: December 23, 2011, 06:55:19 PM »

http://murrieta.patch.com/articles/bar-shooting-leaves-one-dead-police-say-shooter-was-offduty-deputy

Quote
Tragedy struck again last night in Murrieta when an off-duty cop reportedly shot and killed a man at a local pub.

Murrieta police responded shortly before 8 p.m. to a shooting call at Spelly’s Bar and Grille off Murrieta Hot Springs Road.  A white male was found dead of multiple gunshot wounds inside.

The killing was the second to rock the city in as many days. The hunt is still on for a man accused of stabbing 18-year-old Saskia Burke to death in her Murrieta home early Tuesday morning before assaulting her father and boyfriend.

The bar shooter, an off-duty Riverside County sheriff’s deputy, surrendered himself to police without a struggle at the front door, Lt. Tony Conrad said.

The suspect was detained and transferred to Murrieta police headquarters for questioning. The city police department is taking the lead in the shooting investigation with support from the county sheriff’s department.

A sheriff’s spokesman said the department had no comment on the incident and referred requests for information to Murrieta police.

Police shut down the pub’s parking lot and moved about 30 witnesses who were inside at the time of the shooting to a nearby Starbucks for questioning.

Witness from inside

Chris Hull, a 39-year-old Temecula resident, said he was inside the bar and saw the shooting happen.

Hull said he witnessed a man walking up while Hull and a group of friends were playing darts. The man reportedly identified himself as an off-duty cop and started a discussion with the group about darts.

“We were playing darts, and he says 'I’m better at darts than you are,”' Hull said.

“My buddy says, ‘Aw, you suck at darts.’ (The man) says, ‘That’s why I’m a cop, I can do whatever I want to do.’”

Hull said his friend, identified only as Danny, asked the man, “Really, you can do anything?” The man then pulled out his gun, Hull said, and after the group repeatedly asked him to put it away he “pops three rounds into my friend Sam.”

Hull identified his friend as Sam Venettes. He didn't answer a request for Vanette's age or hometown, but said he was a "hardworking guy" who "works three jobs."

Police have not released any information on the name of the victim.

"I just watched the most horrific scene I've seen in my entire life," Hull told Patch.

"This is the worst day of my life."

The shooting was unrelated to the Tuesday stabbing death and ongoing manhunt for the suspect, Conrad said.
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jaycee
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« Reply #941 on: December 23, 2011, 07:03:34 PM »

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=960&sid=18591691

Quote
SALT LAKE CITY — A second woman has filed a federal lawsuit alleging a Box Elder County sheriff's deputy illegally strip-searched her last year.

Talia S. Buck, of Salt Lake County, says deputy Scott R. Womack pulled her over on the afternoon of Nov. 26, 2010, just south of Brigham City. He told her there was a warrant for her arrest in Arizona. Buck told him it must be a mistake because she had never been to Arizona, according to the suit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court.

Womack went back to his patrol car and Buck called her mother on her cell phone. When Womack returned, he told her except for her middle name, Buck matched the description for the Arizona woman. He told her the only way to prove her identity was to compare tattoos with the Arizona woman, the suit says. Buck told him she had a tattoo on her foot and her collar bone, which she reluctantly showed the officer. He told her he needed more proof and she complied, lifting the back of her shirt to reveal her lower back and abdomen.

Womack, according to the suit, told her the tattoo would be on her lower abdomen and she would have to show more.

"She could either pull down or 'low-ride' her pants to show Womack, or take the 'hard way' and be arrested and fingerprinted at the police station," the lawsuit states.

Buck says she began crying and told the deputy she needed to talk to her mother who was still on her cell phone.

"Womack suddenly became visibly nervous. Womack stated 'you seem like a nice girl. Let's just pretend this never happened.'"


Buck's story is similar to that of then 17-year-old Tamsen Reid in November 2010. Reid, now 18, held a news conference in August to tell her story.

According to Buck's suit, several women complained to the Box Elder County Sheriff's Office with similar stories. Buck says she called the office the day after the incident and was told, "I don't think officer Womack is that type of person."

The lawsuit also names Sheriff J. Lynn Yeates and Box Elder County.

In August, an attorney for the sheriff's office said Womack "left employment" and that the Weber County Attorney's Office was conducting a criminal investigation into Reid's allegations. Peace Officer Standards and Training also was investigating.
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