The General Police Brutality Thread

So Mohammed Noor was sentenced to 12.5 years in prison today for the killing of Justine Ruszczyk a couple of years ago in Minneapolis. I mean, okay, that's fine, I guess, but Ruszczyk and Laquan McDonald and Stephon Clark and Philando Castile are all still dead. Is this sentencing, and Van Dyke's in Chicago, going to lead to actual changes in policing? If not, I'm not sure it matters at all. Noor was apparently more skittish than a mouse at an eagle convention and should never have been a police officer in the first place. Has Minneapolis changed their training and evaluation procedures? Not only was Van Dyke completely confident that his fellow Chicago PD officers would have his back after he murdered someone right in front of them, he was completely right to be. Let's forget, the only reason Van Dyke was arrested for murder in the first place is because a journalist spent a year shoving FOIA requests up their rear-ends. If it was up to Chicago PD, Van Dyke would still be out there, protecting and serving. You could send Van Dyke to prison for 3,000 years and it might not change the culture of the department. We'll see, I guess.
 
It's never over man, constant vigilance is a price, right?

You have to look at rates, otherwise the noise of tech will drive you mad. The world has plenty of opportunity to do that without the help.
 
It's never over man, constant vigilance is a price, right?

You have to look at rates, otherwise the noise of tech will drive you mad. The world has plenty of opportunity to do that without the help.

I completely agree with this sentiment and try to make this point about crime all the time. It seems higher than it is because of media, and the same applies to police brutality. That said a lot of police officers as a profession handle this stuff really unprofessionally. First off you shouldn't be covering up for obvious murders and you should be reporting on each other if another officer is acting reckless and dangerous. Every other real first responder profession does this, it is not asking too much for cops to do it.
 
Police face mounting brutality claims after Hong Kong clashes

HONG KONG: Their motto has been "Asia's Finest" since colonial times, but videos of Hong Kong police beating unarmed protesters have fuelled public anger and sparked accusations of brutality.
(Continued)
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...ality-claims-after-hong-kong-clashes-11624030

Bound to happen.

A sad day for Hong Kong and democracy in the world.

“We’re furious, we’re angry, some of us are afraid — but we’re here anyway,” says Laurie Wen, a 48-year-old writer who joined this month’s protests. “The thing that infuriates us the most is pointing to the sky during the day and calling it night.”

https://time.com/longform/hong-kong-protests/?utm_source=reddit.com


Hmmm this nationalism thing seems like a rot to humanity and reason. . .
 
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I'm not sure what to think about the Hong Kong thing because by everything I know about the place (which admittedly isn't much) the government of the island isn't really a whole lot better than the Communist Party.
 
The Hong Kong government is basically controlled by Beijing, in that every candidate has to be approved by Beijing to stand for election.

However, the fact that the law doesn't currently allow extradition of wanted people to mainland China, is a layer of protection for the people there. A thin layer, all the time the CCP has been kidnapping people from Hong Kong and transporting them to the mainland, but a layer of protection nonetheless.

I can't see how they will be able to stop the law, but I greatly sympathise with the protesters.
 
Phoenix cops held this black family at gunpoint and threaten to shoot the black mother dead all because her 4-year-old baby walked out of a store with a Barbie doll without her noticing.
https://twitter.com/_SJPeace_/status/1139533347280039937
and
Police found 20-year-old Willie McCoy sleeping in his own car & proceeded to murder him by shooting him 55 times in 3.5 seconds. 55X In 3.5 Sec! Vallejo City attorney has filed a report calling the murder “reasonable.”
https://twitter.com/QasimRashid/status/1139626746653872129

After the shots, police began to yell again, “Let me see your hands.” But McCoy had already been shot by police.

“Vallejo PD really yelling commands after letting off at least 25 rounds into this guy,” one commenter on the video said.
https://heavy.com/news/2019/02/willie-mccoy-willie-bo/
 
BBC said:
US police probe arrest of black man using IV machine outside hospital
US police are investigating the arrest of a black patient in Illinois who was detained near a hospital while attached to an intravenous (IV) machine.

Shaquille Dukes says he went for a walk on his doctor's orders, but was held after a white security guard accused him of trying to steal the machine.

Mr Dukes has now filed a complaint alleging racial profiling.

Freeport police say their officers acted "the best way they could", but have launched an independent probe.

Freeport Health Network (FHN) Memorial Hospital has not commented on the incident, calling it a police matter.

The incident took place on 9 June, and gained national press coverage on Monday after it was picked up by US broadcasters.

On Monday, Freeport police told US media that an external investigator would assess whether officers handled the arrest appropriately.

What does Shaquille Dukes say?
The 24-year-old from Chicago says he was admitted to the hospital with double pneumonia while on holiday.

He says in a Facebook post that "after receiving doctors orders to walk around, I was stopped by an overzealous, racist, security officer, who claimed that I 'was trying to leave the hospital to sell the IV equipment on eBay.'"

He says the police were then called and arrested him for attempted theft.

Mr Dukes says his IV was removed - "not by a doctor" - as police officers stood by.

"They [the police] took my rescue inhaler and began to transport me to the city lockup, while in transit I began to have a seizure, and subsequently an asthma attack, I pleaded with officers for almost four minutes to retrieve my inhaler from the transporting officer, and finally, when I became unresponsive, it miraculously appeared."

What did the police say?
In a statement posted on Facebook, Freeport Police urged "the public to reserve judgment while a complete review of the incident is performed".

It added that the IV was removed "at the request of the subject by FHN medical personnel (not security or police)".

Police chief Todd Barkalow told ABC News that it had been determined that Mr Dukes "was likely not trying to steal any of the property", but he and two other men were arrested "for disorderly conduct" towards the security guard.

The police have shared police body camera footage which they say shows officers "handled it in the best way they could... given the situation that they had in front of them".

Officials also told ABC News that Mr Dukes had not been given permission "to leave the hospital while still hooked to an IV machine".

Mr Dukes is due to appear in court next month, US media reports say.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48831646https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48831646
 
Yeah, it's not just the police. It used to be that "driving while black" was suspicious behavior, but now there's "getting coffee while black", and "taking a nap while black." I guess we can add "being treated for pneumonia while black" to the list.

CNN - 28 Dec 2018: "Living While Black: Routine activities for which police were called on African-Americans this year"

CNN said:
It's happened yet again.

An African-American guest at a Portland hotel says staffers called police on him after he took a phone call in the lobby -- an incident many observers see as another in a dispiriting and all-too-familiar series.
In 2018, police across the United States have been urged to investigate black people for doing all kinds of daily, mundane, noncriminal activities.

This year alone, police have been called on African-Americans for:
Operating a lemonade store
Golfing too slowly
Waiting for a friend at Starbucks
Barbecuing at a park
Working out at a gym
Campaigning door to door
Moving into an apartment
Mowing the wrong lawn
Shopping for prom clothes
Napping in a university common room
Asking for directions
Not waving while leaving an Airbnb
Redeeming a coupon
Selling bottled water on a sidewalk
Eating lunch on a college campus
Riding in a car with a white grandmother
Babysitting two white children
Wearing a backpack that brushed against a woman
Working as a home inspector
Working as a firefighter
Helping a homeless man
Delivering newspapers
Swimming in a pool
Shopping while pregnant
Driving with leaves on a car
Trying to cash a paycheck
"Not waving while leaving an Airbnb"? What? That sounds like a Key & Peele sketch. Some days, I don't even know what country I live in... :lol:
 
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