Police officers mock body-worn video of semi-naked woman​

Police officers made "sickening" comments about an assault victim while watching body-worn video showing her groin, the BBC has learned.

The woman's body was exposed when she was filmed suffering from a seizure. Three Thames Valley Police PCs later watched the footage without reason.

None of the officers faced a misconduct hearing but a student officer who reported them was later dismissed.

The force says the remarks were "unacceptable" and PCs were sanctioned.

The policing regulator says Thames Valley Police should have reported the case for independent scrutiny. The force has now done so, following our investigation.

Last year the BBC revealed that police forces have misused body-worn video, with officers switching off cameras, deleting footage and sharing videos on WhatsApp.

In our latest investigation we found:

  • The vulnerable woman was arrested and placed in leg restraints before being recorded on body-worn video while vomiting and losing consciousness
  • Officers watching the footage insulted her looks, used derogatory language about her genitals and discussed what they would need to be paid to sleep with her
  • The 22-year-old woman told the BBC she feels "betrayed" and believes officers should have been arrested
  • The student officer who reported his colleagues says the force covered up the incident, failing to inform the woman or the policing regulator about what happened
The BBC's previous findings about camera misuse were "truly shocking" and have already led to forces tightening up systems to prevent the deletion of footage, the chair of the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners, Donna Jones said.

She now wants mandatory rules for camera use which officers would be obliged to comply with.

'Sickening comments'​

The latest incident - in Newbury, Berkshire - came to light because of the actions of a student officer, who we are calling Faisal to protect his identity. He had been called to a report of a fight while patrolling the town centre late at night last year.

The woman was arrested, handcuffed and placed in a police van by Faisal and two colleagues - a female PC and his male tutor, also a PC - after officers believed she had committed an assault.

On the way to the police station, the woman suffered a seizure which left her chest and groin exposed. The moment was recorded on officer body-worn video and the police van was redirected to hospital where she was "street bailed", meaning the officers left her there to be treated.

The next day, Faisal says, the female PC told him and his tutor she was cancelling the bail and taking no further action because CCTV of the fight showed that the woman had in fact been a victim of assault.

Later that shift, the female officer began viewing body-worn video of the woman's journey inside the van while at her desk in Newbury Police Station. Three male colleagues, including the tutor, gathered around her laptop and watched the footage while making "sickening" comments about her - according to Faisal, who was also in the room.

His witness statement, which we have seen, records the types of comments made by colleagues. He reports his tutor saying the woman had "crusty" or "manky" breasts, while another officer asked to see her "minge".

A fourth male colleague also joined a discussion about how much money officers would need to be paid to have sex with her. One suggested £500,000, another said £250.

Faisal says officers referred to the woman by name and were clearly aware of her identity - and watched the footage despite the female PC's decision that charges would not be brought.

"I just thought: 'This is a victim of crime, a person who we know to be vulnerable.' How can you talk about someone like that?"

The BBC spent months trying to find the woman. When we finally spoke to her, she said the force had not told her what had happened at the time. She told the BBC she wanted the public to know how officers had behaved.

"It makes me feel betrayed," she says. "The police are supposed to be the people you go to when you need help."

She believes officers should have been arrested - and the force investigated to find out if officers behave like this routinely.

'Disgrace'​

Faisal says he felt obliged to report the officers' behaviour - even if he believed the culture in the force meant it would cost him his job.

"The fact I had to weigh up reporting what I saw against keeping my career is a disgrace," he says.

Following his report, an investigation was launched by Thames Valley Police's professional standards department.

Faisal says he was immediately "shunned" by colleagues and expected to leave. A sergeant showed him job adverts outside policing.

In August, he was told he was not physically or mentally "fitted" to be a police constable and dismissed.

Faisal is insistent that the only failing he was ever criticised for was his first-ever arrest - when he agreed to momentarily release a suspect's handcuffs on the express advice of a senior colleague.

"I was dismissed for reporting misconduct - there's no doubt in my mind," he says.

The BBC has learned that none of the officers involved in the incident faced misconduct hearings - which would have been held in public.

Faisal believes the force acted deliberately to preserve its reputation.

"If I'd ignored what I saw that would have made me a corrupt officer."

'Horror story'​

Thames Valley Police told the BBC that it was thankful the student officer reported what he saw, his disclosure had been treated seriously and the ending of his employment was an "entirely separate" matter.

In a statement, it said his tutor had no involvement in his probation after the whistleblowing report had been made. It added that the student officer had been moved to a different station, given a new tutor and supported through his complaint.

The force repeatedly refused to confirm whether one of the officers involved later joined its Protection Group - a team which provides security to the prime minister and royalty when they visit the area - only saying that none of them are currently a member of any close protection detail.

It also said some officers involved faced misconduct meetings - which are not held in public. But when the BBC requested anonymised details of any disciplinary outcomes under Freedom of Information law, the force declined to share them, saying disclosure risked identifying individuals.

The case is "a horror story of misogyny and sexism" that is "massively" damaging to public confidence, former chief prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service, Nazir Afzal says.

His 2022 review into the culture of the London Fire Brigade recommended a roll-out of cameras across the service.

But he says the BBC's investigations have uncovered "systemic failings" in the scrutiny of police body-worn video - and the Newbury case is "very troubling".

"There is no doubt that this would have a significant impact on public confidence - in those circumstances, the [regulator] should be engaged," he says.

The woman's seizure while in police custody was reported to the regulator - the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) - under rules mandating such referrals. But at the time, the force did not voluntarily refer the officers' viewing of the footage and ridiculing of the woman.

The IOPC says the officers' behaviour will "no doubt" damage public confidence - and it would have expected the force to immediately refer the conduct for it to decide whether an independent investigation was required.

It added that this had now happened, following our investigation.

'Used appropriately'​

The BBC has uncovered other instances of footage being misused.

We learned that Bedfordshire police deleted footage of a woman claiming an inspector had raped her, while an Avon & Somerset officer shared a nude image with colleagues on email.

The BBC can also reveal further concerns about the extent of body-worn video misuse, following on from the 150 cases highlighted in our previous investigation.

We asked all forces for records they held scrutinising the use of cameras - through information requests - but only Merseyside Police provided an extensive dataset.

It showed that 1,559 amber or red warnings were raised from 7,769 camera uses in stop and searches between 2020 and 2022 - one in five cases.

Donna Jones, who is also Police and Crime Commissioner for Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, says officers employ cameras appropriately in the majority of 18 million recordings made each year - but mandatory rules are now needed.

The Home Office declined to say whether it had plans to introduce changes - but said existing guidance on standards was already governed by data protection law.

A spokesperson said that while the vast majority of officers work tirelessly to keep the public safe, action must be taken "swiftly" to address failings.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-67958136
 

US man faces hate crime over damage to Satanic Temple display in Iowa​

A man who has admitted to damaging a controversial Satanic Temple holiday display in the Iowa Capitol is now facing a serious hate crime charge.

Michael Cassidy, 35, an ex-Navy pilot who lost a race for the Mississippi legislature last year, was motivated by the victim's religion, prosecutors say.

On Tuesday, he was charged with third-degree criminal mischief in violation of individual rights - a hate crime.

Mr Cassidy has already raised $110,000 (£86,000) for his legal defence.

In a statement, the Polk County prosecutor's office said that Mr Cassidy "dismantled" the "Baphomet Altar" on 14 December and "destroyed the headpiece".

"In addition, evidence shows the defendant made statements to law enforcement and the public indicating he destroyed the property because of the victim's religion," prosecutors added.

Photos posted online show the display featured a depiction of a goat's head known as a Baphomet statue and a wreath adorned with a pentagram.

It had been allowed in Iowa's statehouse under rules that permit religious installations for two weeks during the holidays.

Its presence divided Republicans leaders in the state and it was criticised by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis in December during his presidential run.

Mr Cassidy had previously told conservative website The Sentinel that he destroyed the shrine in order to "awaken Christians to the anti-Christian acts promoted by our government".

"I saw this blasphemous statue and was outraged," Mr Cassidy said. "My conscience is held captive to the word of God, not to bureaucratic decree. And so I acted."

In a statement on Wednesday, the Satanic Temple thanked the Polk County prosecutors for "recognizing the Satanic Temples authentic religious standing, reinforcing our rightful place in a society that acknowledges diverse beliefs".

The group has previously said that the statue was damaged "beyond repair" and filed a claim for $3,000, according to the Sioux City Journal.

The newspaper reports that the group is also requesting an additional $3,300 (£2,365) in restitution for the removal of the statue.

Glinda Vyn Cooley, a Satanic Temple minister, said that members of the congregation wore bullet proof vests to retrieve the altar from the statehouse due to online threats.

Mr Cassidy had previously been charged with fourth-degree criminal mischief, punishable by a maximum sentence of a year in prison and a $2,560 fine.

The Satanic Temple, founded in 2013, is recognised as a religion by the US government, and has ministers and congregations in the US, Europe and Australia.

It concentrates its efforts on social action and describes itself as a "non-theistic religious organisation".

The mission statement on the group's website says it "has publicly confronted hate groups, fought for the abolition of corporal punishment in public schools, applied for equal representation when religious installations are placed on public property" and other activist work.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68162566
 

No charges for New Mexico officers who knocked on wrong door before fatal shooting​

Authorities in New Mexico will not seek charges against three police officers involved in a fatal shooting after arriving at the wrong house last year.

Officers in the town of Farmington fired dozens of shots and killed Robert Dotson, 52, because he appeared at the door of his home holding a gun.

At the time, the officers were responding to a domestic violence call from a house across the street.

The Dotson family filed a lawsuit against the department last year.

According to a complaint filed by the family in court, police arrived at the Dotson residence late on 5 April, 2023 and "parked down the street and did not have their lights on".

When Mr Dotson opened his front door holding a weapon, police immediately opened fire, striking him 12 times. Another 19 shots were fired at his wife Kimberly, who was unharmed during the incident. Police later said she opened fire on officers with a pistol.

In a letter dated 26 January, New Mexico Deputy Attorney General Greer Staley said that the state's justice department determined that the officers "did not use excessive force under the circumstances when they discharged their weapons."

The letter added that the officers' approach to the Dotson home - "although they erroneously approached the wrong house" - was "reasonable, appropriate and consistent with generally accepted police practices".

An analysis of the incident included in the report concluded that Mr Dotson and his wife both created an "imminent threat of death or great bodily harm" to the officers.

Doug Perrin, an attorney for the Dotson family, told CBS - the BBC's US partner - that the family was disappointed in the decision.

"One of the disturbing things about the decision not to prosecute the police is the feeling that you may not be safe in your own home, because certainly Mr Dotson was not."

After this week's decision, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of New Mexico called for "systemic change" in police use of force policies in the state.

"We hope law enforcement officials use this tragic event as a teaching moment and exercise due diligence when responding to calls and require de-escalation and rigorous use force standards," said ACLU of New Mexico investigation and research manager Barron Jones.

A separate lawsuit has been filed to a federal court in New Mexico against the department for wrongful death and seeks unspecified damages.

The lawsuit alleges that one of the officers involved "opened fire instantly" and that Mr Dotson was "blinded by police flashlights."

"The police did not announce themselves, and Mr Dotson had no idea who was in his yard shining bright lights at him," the lawsuit alleges.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68169406
 
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Direct link to article:
 
Australian academic Yang Hengjun given suspended death sentence by Chinese court

Australian academic Yang Hengjun has been given a suspended death sentence by a Chinese court, after five years in detention on espionage charges.

Yang was arrested in 2019 at Guangzhou airport, accused of spying for an undisclosed foreign country. The 57-year-old pro-democracy blogger is an Australian citizen who was born in China. He was tried in a one-day, closed-door hearing in Beijing in May 2021, with a verdict not publicly disclosed.

The sentence revealed on Monday is formally described as a death sentence with a two-year reprieve. It is a relatively common ruling that allows death sentences to be commuted to 25 years, or life in prison after two years of good behaviour. China is believed to be the world’s biggest user of the death penalty, but there is no publicly available data. China’s court system is notoriously opaque, with conviction rates above 99.9% and very few cases overturned for wrongful convictions.
 
Cambodia jails Taiwanese YouTuber for fake kidnap

A Taiwanese YouTuber has been jailed in Cambodia for attempting to stage his own abduction with a friend.

Chen Neng-chuan was arrested with his friend, Lu Tsu-hsien, after posting a video of them apparently being detained and beaten up by security guards in the port city of Sihanoukville.

The area has become notorious for gangs kidnapping people and then forcing them to carry out online scams.

Both men have been sentenced to two years in prison.

The pair were arrested after Chen - known online as Goodnight Chicken - posted videos on Monday, in which they claimed they had been kidnapped and needed help.

The following day, Chen's wife announced on social media that her husband had gone missing. He then posted another video claiming they were fleeing the kidnappers and said he had been injured in the ordeal, with part of his head shaved.

But online sleuths quickly started casting doubt on the story.

Online influencer Liu Yu managed to pinpoint Chen's location using the footage he had posted, and showed that Chen appeared to have circled an area instead of running away as he claimed.

He also questioned why his abductors would have allowed him to keep his equipment for live streaming.

Soon after, the pair were arrested in their hotel room. They were then paraded in front of the media along with props found in their room.

The provincial court said on Friday that they had been found guilty on charges of "incitement to cause chaos to social security".
 

Ex-N.R.A. Chief Wayne LaPierre Found Liable for Financial Misconduct​

A Manhattan jury found that the National Rifle Association’s former leader had used the group’s funds to pay for lavish personal expenses, including vacations and luxury flights.

In a sweeping rebuke of the National Rifle Association, the nation’s most prominent gun rights group, a Manhattan jury ruled on Friday that its leaders had engaged in a yearslong pattern of financial misconduct and corruption. The jury, after a week of deliberations, found that the group’s former leader, Wayne LaPierre, had used N.R.A. funds to pay for personal expenses, including vacations, luxury flights for his relatives and yacht rides, and that two other top executives had failed in their fiduciary duties to the nonprofit organization.
The case, brought by New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, touched the uppermost echelons of the gun-rights group. In addition to Mr. LaPierre, the defendants included the group’s former treasurer, Wilson Phillips, and its general counsel, John Frazer. The N.R.A. itself was also a defendant, and found to have ignored whistle-blower complaints and submitted false filings to the state.

Once one of the most powerful lobbying groups in American politics, the N.R.A. had already suffered setbacks, defections and internal strife in recent years, all while guns continued to play an outsize role in political debates between more conservative states seeking to enhance access to them and liberal bastions, like New York, that have sought to stem the tide. The decision in the suit brought by Ms. James was undoubtedly a low-water mark for the group. It was the second major victory for her in a week, following a judgment of at least $454 million levied against former President Donald J. Trump in a civil fraud trial.

Ms. James said late Friday that the N.R.A. verdict was a “major victory for the people of New York.” “For years, Wayne LaPierre used charitable dollars to fund his lavish lifestyle, spending millions on luxury travel, expensive clothes, insider contracts, and other perks for himself and his family,” Ms. James said in a statement. “Today, after years of rampant corruption and self-dealing, Wayne LaPierre and the N.R.A. are finally being held accountable.” Jurors found that Mr. LaPierre had misspent $5.4 million. He has repaid some of that sum, but must still repay $4.35 million. Mr. Phillips must repay $2 million. The judge overseeing the case will decide in a second phase of the trial whether a monitor should be installed to monitor the N.R.A.’s administration of charitable assets, and whether Mr. LaPierre and Mr. Phillips should be barred from serving as officers or directors of any other New York nonprofits, Ms. James said in her statement.
But the group will also get some benefit from the verdict. Because it is a nonprofit, fines paid by the defendants will be returned to the organization. Still, the outcome will hardly result in a financial windfall, given that the N.R.A. has spent tens of millions of dollars a year in legal fees defending this and other cases.

Mr. LaPierre ran the organization for more than three decades, but announced just before the trial began that he would be stepping down. He was present in the courtroom as the verdict was announced. Neither he nor any of the defendants’ lawyers had immediate comment after the verdict. Mr. LaPierre left the courthouse flanked by six court officers and a private security detail, walking quickly to his vehicle as reporters shouted questions and cameras flashed. The six-week trial, in the courtroom of Justice Joel M. Cohen of State Supreme Court, stemmed from a lawsuit brought in 2020 by Ms. James, who had jurisdiction over the N.R.A. because it was chartered as a nonprofit group in New York in 1871. Lawyers for Ms. James, a Democrat, presented voluminous evidence at trial that Mr. LaPierre had misspent millions of dollars on an array of inappropriate expenses, some of which bordered on the bizarre, such as the use of helicopters to avoid traffic during trips to NASCAR races. Other evidence showed Mr. LaPierre seeking reimbursement for mosquito treatment and landscaping at his house.

During the trial, the N.R.A. lawyers had sought to distance the organization from Mr. LaPierre, arguing that while he had done good things for Second Amendment rights, his identity — and his admitted extravagances, including Beverly Hills shopping sprees — was not synonymous with the group’s. “The N.R.A. is not Wayne LaPierre,” a lawyer for the group, Sarah B. Rogers, said in opening statements in January. Mr. LaPierre testified that he had paid back hundreds of thousands of dollars to the organization, with interest — restitution that Ms. James deemed inadequate.

On Friday, anti-gun groups hailed the verdict as a long overdue reproach. We’re two months into 2024 and the N.R.A. has already managed to lose this trial, their longtime leader and whatever political relevance it had left,” said Nick Suplina, the senior vice president for law and policy at one such group, Everytown for Gun Safety. “This verdict confirms what we’ve seen in recent elections, in state legislatures, and in the halls of Congress: the gun lobby has never been weaker.” Shortly before the trial started in January, the group’s former executive director of general operations, Joshua L. Powell, reached a $100,000 settlement with the attorney general’s office, agreeing to admit to “misusing charitable funds” and shirking his fiduciary responsibilities.

In recent years, Mr. Powell, once the N.R.A.’s senior strategist, had turned against the group, calling for gun control and criticizing Mr. LaPierre’s leadership (though some critics found those pleas unconvincing). Mr. LaPierre himself officially stepped down at the end of January, while still professing that his “passion for our cause burns as deeply as ever.”

On Friday evening, Kris Brown, the president of Brady, another anti-gun group, said the monetary damages confronting Mr. LaPierre were “only a drop in the bucket for what he owes the American people for the carnage he fueled.”


 

Grandmother gets $3.7m over false Find My iPhone raid​

A jury has awarded a Denver grandmother $3.76m (£2.9m) after her home was raided by police based on what turned out to be a false Find My iPhone ping to trace stolen goods.

Ruby Johnson, 78, was made to leave her home and wait in the police car while she was dressed in only a bathrobe.

The jury found the raid on 4 January 2022 was without "probable cause" and violated her constitutional rights.

She was given $1.26m in compensatory damages and $2.5m in punitive damages.

Denver police had issued a search warrant the day after a truck was allegedly stolen from the parking garage of hotel.

The vehicle's owner, who was staying at the hotel, told police that the truck contained six firearms — including a tactical military-style rifle — two drones, $4,000 cash and an old iPhone 11, according to NBC News.

He also told officials he had used the Find My iPhone app to locate the phone near Ms Johnson's residence.

A Denver detective and sergeant used the locator to obtain a search warrant, which was approved by Denver's District Attorney's Office.

Dressed in Swat gear and carrying weapons, the officers executed the search warrant at Ms Johnson's home. They found nothing, but in the process, smashed her garage door with a battering ram, broke a collectible doll and wrecked her home, she said.

The BBC has contacted the Denver Police Department for comment.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado, which brought the suit on Ms Johnson's behalf, called the $3.7m compensation "a small step toward justice".

Ms Johnson "and her home" still "carry wounds from that day that have not healed", the ACLU said, adding that the grandmother had moved and had developed health issues from the trauma of the incident.

"t is a critical case under our state's Constitution, for the first time affirming that police can be held accountable for invading someone's home without probable cause," said the organisation's legal director, Tim Macdonald.

Colorado Constitution requires that search warrants be supported by a written affidavit and adequate probable cause before police can raid someone's home, he added.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68482374
 

Bangladesh teacher suspended after allegedly shooting student in exam​

A lecturer in a medical school in Bangladesh has been suspended, two days after allegedly shooting and injuring a student in a classroom.

Raihan Sharif was arrested shortly afterwards but was only suspended on Wednesday following a protest by students from the medical college where the incident took place.

The injured student has undergone surgery and remains in hospital.

Dr Sharif has been taken into police custody.

The BBC is unable to reach him for comment until he is assigned a lawyer.

Local media report that Arafat Amin Tomal, a 23-year-old student at a medical college in Sirajganj, north-western Bangladesh, got into an argument with Dr Sharif while undertaking an oral exam on Monday.

During the exam, Dr Sharif allegedly brought out a gun and pointed it at the student, shooting him in the right knee, reports say.

The bullet reportedly hit Mr Amin's mobile phone, in the pocket of his trousers, which spared him life-threatening injuries, according to Bangladeshi newspaper the Daily Star, quoting the police.

According to the Dhaka Tribune, there were 45 students in the class when the alleged incident happened. They rushed to help, locked the teacher in a room, and called the police.

Dr Sharif was then arrested and taken into custody. In a statement, police said Dr Sharif "shot the student with an illegal pistol".

Police said they seized his gun as well as a second pistol, 81 rounds of bullets, four magazines, two knives, and 10 daggers which they reportedly found in his bag.

According to the police, Dr Sharif was allegedly known for carrying weapons to the school, which he would display during lectures.

The reports have shocked Bangladesh and sparked widespread condemnation that the teacher was only suspended from his position two days after the alleged incident happened, despite his arrest by police.

His suspension was prompted by a protest held by the students at the medical school, who demanded his immediate dismissal and severe punishment. The police said a special committee had been formed to investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Such incidents are rare in Bangladesh, where gun ownership and use are strictly regulated by the government.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-68490662
 

Bangladesh teacher suspended after allegedly shooting student in exam​

A lecturer in a medical school in Bangladesh has been suspended, two days after allegedly shooting and injuring a student in a classroom.

Raihan Sharif was arrested shortly afterwards but was only suspended on Wednesday following a protest by students from the medical college where the incident took place.

The injured student has undergone surgery and remains in hospital.

Dr Sharif has been taken into police custody.

The BBC is unable to reach him for comment until he is assigned a lawyer.

Local media report that Arafat Amin Tomal, a 23-year-old student at a medical college in Sirajganj, north-western Bangladesh, got into an argument with Dr Sharif while undertaking an oral exam on Monday.

During the exam, Dr Sharif allegedly brought out a gun and pointed it at the student, shooting him in the right knee, reports say.

The bullet reportedly hit Mr Amin's mobile phone, in the pocket of his trousers, which spared him life-threatening injuries, according to Bangladeshi newspaper the Daily Star, quoting the police.

According to the Dhaka Tribune, there were 45 students in the class when the alleged incident happened. They rushed to help, locked the teacher in a room, and called the police.

Dr Sharif was then arrested and taken into custody. In a statement, police said Dr Sharif "shot the student with an illegal pistol".

Police said they seized his gun as well as a second pistol, 81 rounds of bullets, four magazines, two knives, and 10 daggers which they reportedly found in his bag.

According to the police, Dr Sharif was allegedly known for carrying weapons to the school, which he would display during lectures.

The reports have shocked Bangladesh and sparked widespread condemnation that the teacher was only suspended from his position two days after the alleged incident happened, despite his arrest by police.

His suspension was prompted by a protest held by the students at the medical school, who demanded his immediate dismissal and severe punishment. The police said a special committee had been formed to investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Such incidents are rare in Bangladesh, where gun ownership and use are strictly regulated by the government.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-68490662
:eek:- Damn that must have been a hard a** test... either that or this professor is the strictest grader I've ever heard of!

Prof: "This answer is WRONG!"
Student: "No its not!"
Prof: *pulls out gun*:

Some notes:
The bullet reportedly hit Mr Amin's mobile phone, in the pocket of his trousers, which spared him life-threatening injuries
:confused: What kind of phone did he have?? What an ad that would be... get an [I-phone] your life depends on it :mwaha: (reminds me of a Boondocks episode where exactly that happened to Samuel L. Jackson's character, Gin Rummy)
Police said they seized his gun as well as a second pistol, 81 rounds of bullets, four magazines, two knives, and 10 daggers which they reportedly found in his bag.
:dubious: WTF?!? Why did a med-school professor come to class armed to storm the beaches in Normandy?
Such incidents are rare in Bangladesh, where gun ownership and use are strictly regulated by the government.
You don't say :shake:... *sigh*... its almost like there is an idea in there somewhere :think:...
 
:eek:- Damn that must have been a hard a** test... either that or this professor is the strictest grader I've ever heard of!

Prof: "This answer is WRONG!"
Student: "No its not!"
Prof: *pulls out gun*:

Some notes:

:confused: What kind of phone did he have?? What an ad that would be... get an [I-phone] your life depends on it :mwaha: (reminds me of a Boondocks episode where exactly that happened to Samuel L. Jackson's character, Gin Rummy)

:dubious: WTF?!? Why did a med-school professor come to class armed to storm the beaches in Normandy?

You don't say :shake:... *sigh*... its almost like there is an idea in there somewhere :think:...

Ten thousand students being shot dead by their teachers every day is an acceptable price for FREEDOM
 
WA children's commissioner 'appalled' by vision showing children cable tied together in Broome
In short: Police allege a 45-year-old Broome man used unreasonable force when he cable tied children together after finding them swimming in a pool on a vacant property.

A 45-year-old man has since been charged with three counts of aggravated assault and he will face Broome Magistrates Court on March 25.

 
Switzerland to try Syria’s Rifaat al-Assad for war crimes

Swiss federal prosecutors have referred Syria’s ex-Vice President Rifaat al-Assad, the uncle of the country’s current president, for trial on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed more than four decades ago.

The attorney general’s office said on Tuesday the 86-year-old was accused of the crimes in February 1982 while serving as commander of the defence brigades that carried out an attack in the Syrian city of Hama during a conflict between the military and the opposition. Security forces killed thousands to crush a Muslim Brotherhood uprising in the central city that year.

“The accused is charged with ordering homicides, acts of torture, cruel treatments and illegal detentions … in his capacity as commander of the defence brigades … and commander of operations in Hama,” the office said in a statement.

It said the alleged “war crimes and crimes against humanity” he was being charged with had taken place “within the context of the armed conflict and the widespread and systematic attack launched against the population of the city of Hama”.

According to the indictment, the conflict is estimated to have caused between 3,000 and 60,000 deaths in Hama, most of them civilians.

After he was convicted in France of illegal use of Syrian state funds and sentenced to four years in prison, his nephew, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, allowed him back into war-torn Syria, ending his more than 30 years of exile in France.

The criminal proceedings in Switzerland were finally initiated under so-called international jurisdiction, which allows countries to prosecute alleged crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide regardless of where they were committed.

Swiss authorities determined that al-Assad was in Switzerland when the official probe was launched by investigators in the country.
 
I doubt all ~18,000 [U.S. law enforcement] agencies have been subject to scrutiny, though. Could be all sorts of shenanigans going on.
Literally seconds after posting that, I saw this:


L.A. Times said:
FBI agents on Monday raided a federal women’s prison in California so plagued by sexual abuse it was known among inmates and workers as the “rape club.” The action coincided with the ouster of the new warden from the federal correctional institution in Dublin.

As FBI agents hauled boxes from inside the Northern California prison, Warden Art Dulgov — just a few months into his tenure — and three other top managers were removed from their positions by the federal Bureau of Prisons.

Dulgov and staff are accused of retaliating against an inmate who testified in January in a lawsuit brought by female inmates against the prison, according to a court filing.
 
The Forced or Involuntary Sterilization Compensation Program (FISCP) ended on December 31, 2023. CalVCB can no longer accept applications.

From the FAQ at: www.victims.ca.gov/fiscp

Who qualified for the program?

For survivors of sterilization in state-run facilities:

Sterilization happened between 1909 and 1979
You were sterilized while at a state hospital, home, or institution
The facility was run by:
The California Department of State Hospitals, or
The California Department of Developmental Services
See a list of facilities covered by the program at Health and Safety Code 24210.
The victim was alive as of July 1, 2021

For survivors of sterilization in prison:

Sterilization happened after 1979
You were sterilized while in a state prison or correctional facility
The facility was run by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
Sterilization was not required for emergency life-saving medical reasons
Sterilization was not due to a chemical sterilization program for convicted sex offenders
Sterilization was for birth control purposes
You were sterilized under one of the following conditions:
Without consent,
With consent given less than 30 days before sterilization,
With consent given without counseling or consultation, or
With no record or documentation of giving consent
 

Ex-police officer sentenced to 20 years in Mississippi torture case​

Former Mississippi police officer Hunter Elward has been sentenced to 20 years for his role in torturing two black men in their own home.

Elward is the first of six officers due to be sentenced this week.

The victims were beaten, shocked with stun guns and sexually assaulted by the officers who burst in without a warrant in 2023. One of them was also shot in the mouth.

The group pleaded guilty to federal civil rights offences in August.

Elward's sentencing will be followed by the other five: Christian Dedmon, Brett McAlpin, Jerffrey Middleton, Daniel Opydke and Joshua Hartfield.

Each faces the possibility of decades in prison on the charges, which include conspiracy against rights, obstructions of justice, deprivation of rights under colour of law, discharge of a firearm under a crime of violence, and conspiracy to obstruct justice.

According to prosecutors, the officers - all of whom are white, and who called themselves the 'Goon Squad' - were responding to a call about suspicious activity in the Rankin County town of Braxton when they entered the home of Michael Jenkins and Eddie Parker.

The two men were handcuffed and subject to an hours-long assault in which they were repeatedly beaten, shocked and mocked with racial slurs.

Elward also shot Mr Jenkins in the mouth during a botched mock execution, cutting his tongue and breaking his jaw.

On Monday, Mr Jenkins and Mr Parker called for the "stiffest of sentences" to be meted out on the former officers.

"It's been very hard for me, for us," Mr Jenkins told the Associated Press. "We are hoping for the best and preparing for the worst."

Three of the six officers in the case have also pleaded guilty to a separate incident involving a 28-year-old white victim. The details of that incident are still unclear.

Subsequent investigations by the New York Times, Mississippi Today and the Associated Press found that the 2023 incident was part of a larger pattern of violent police misconduct spanning decades.

The Associated Press investigation linked some of the officers to at least four other violent encounters that left two people dead.

Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey, for whom the officers were working, is facing a separate $400m lawsuit for allegedly failing to properly train the officers.

Mr Bailey has asked that the suit be dismissed and, after months of silence, vowed to change the department after the officers pleaded guilty in August.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68606973
 

Arizona rancher goes on trial for killing migrant​

The trial of an Arizona rancher accused of murdering a migrant on his property is due to begin as American voters increasingly focus on issues at the US-Mexico border.

George Alan Kelly, 75, shot and killed the 48-year-old Mexican national on his ranch in January 2023.

His lawyers allege he shot into the air and feared for his family's safety.

Arizona lawmakers have introduced a bill that would allow property owners to shoot trespassers.

Court documents say that Mr Kelly was having a meal with his wife on 30 January 2023 when he spotted a group of five camouflaged men moving through his cattle ranch near Nogales.

His lawyers claim that he was frightened at the time and shot into the air, rather than directly at the migrants.

But prosecutors allege that Mr Kelly recklessly fired an AK-47 rifle at the migrants from a distance of about 295 ft (90m), striking and ultimately killing Mexican citizen Gabriel Cuen-Buitimea. The other migrants escaped unharmed and fled back towards Mexico.

Mr Kelly rejected a plea deal in January that would have seen the charge reduced to negligent homicide in exchange for a guilty plea.

Second-degree murder carries a maximum penalty of 22 years in Arizona. The trial is expected to last a month.

The controversial trial begins just weeks after conservative Arizona lawmakers in the state's House passed legislation that could allow property owners to kill or threaten to kill people using their property to enter the US.

The bill does not specifically mention migrants, but Republican Justin Heap - who sponsored the legislation - said in a February hearing that it would create a legal loophole to help ranchers facing "an increasingly large number of migrants or human traffickers".

Arizona's Democratic Governor, Katie Hobbs, has vowed to veto the bill if it makes it to her desk.

Phoenix representative Analise Ortiz, told NBC last month that the legislation would mean it was "open season on migrants" in Arizona.

"It would give people free rein to execute somebody and it would broaden extrajudicial killings," she said.

Arizona's existing "Castle doctrine" allows property owners to use deadly force only to defend themselves or another person from harm. The current law requires that the intruder to be in a residence or other structure in which people live, rather than on their wider property.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68639475
 
She's lucky that she evidently had no pets for the officers to shoot
SWAT Team Raids Innocent Family Over Stolen AirPods Dropped on Their Street
St. Louis County Police have some explaining to do

A pair of AirPods and what lawyers say was some shoddy police work resulted in an innocent middle-class Ferguson family having their front door smashed in by the St. Louis County SWAT team last May.

Around 6:30 p.m. on May 26, Brittany Shamily was at home with her children, including an infant, when police used a battering ram to bust in her front door. “What the hell is going on?” she screamed, terrified for herself and her family. “I got a three-month-old baby!”

Body camera footage from the scene shows Shamily come to the front door, her hands up, her face a mix of fright and utter confusion at the heavily armed folly making its way from her front porch into her foyer. “Oh my god,” she says.

The SWAT team was looking for guns and other material related to a carjacking that had occurred that morning. Their search didn’t turn up any of that — though it has led to a lawsuit, filed Friday, that may lead to a better public understanding of how county police decide whether to deploy a SWAT team or serve a search warrant in a less menacing manner.

Because in this case, the police clearly made the wrong call.

The carjacking that led to the raid happened about 12 hours prior, 16 miles away, in south county.

Around 6 a.m., two brothers were leaving the Waffle House on Telegraph Road near Jefferson Barracks when a group of six people pulled up outside the restaurant and carjacked them. Two of the carjackers took off in the brothers' Dodge Charger while the other four fled the scene in their own vehicles.

St. Louis County Police were summoned to the scene. As part of their investigation, a friend of the carjacked brothers told police that his AirPods were in the stolen car and that he could track them using the “FindMy” application, a feature that lets users locate one Apple device using another.

Police did just that and, according to the lawsuit, the app showed the AirPods to be at Shamily’s house.

There was just one problem.

"FindMy is not that accurate," says the family’s lawyer, Bevis Schock. "I actually went to my house with my co-counsel and played around with it for an hour. It's just not that good."

Yet based on the “FindMy” result, an officer signed an application for a search warrant saying he had reason to believe that "firearms, ammunition, holsters" and other "firearm-related material" were inside.

That evening, police showed up in full combat gear carrying a battering ram.

Shamily's husband, Lindell Briscoe, was napping in his work truck in the driveway with two of the couple's other children when police showed up. They pointed their weapons at him, demanding he get out.

Inside the house, body camera footage shows one of the officers in full SWAT gear pick up the crying three-month-old and carry the baby outside. Shamily asked if she could sit down and was told no.


baby3.png

In January 2022, SWAT teams in Denver raided an elderly woman's home after the "FindMy" app falsely pinged her home as the location of a stolen iPhone. The woman was recently awarded $3.76 million in compensation and damages.

IANAL, but I'd bet that the bodycam image of the 3 month old being taken by an armed cop would start the payout at about 1 million.
 
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