Cowardly Cops Love Tasers

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Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Via my friend Radley Balko's The Agitator

http://www.theagitator.com/2009/08/01/taser-nation/

===
1) Cops tase 55 year old man three times for being "disorderly" in his own backyard during a child's baptism party and then charge him with "public intoxication" - again while in his own back yard.

25 year old pregnant woman objects to their actions and is also tased

Prince William County Police issued a statement confirming two people were Tasered at the Baptism party.

A spokesperson says, "The officers contacted the homeowner, who was highly intoxicated. The officers explained the noise ordinance to the homeowner, who refused several requests to turn down the loud music. Rodriguez began to act disorderly and refused to identify himself to officers."

Bar: Uh...maybe the challenge was that the officers spoke English and the man did not
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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2) Meanwhile, in Alabama, officers tase the patootie out of deaf, mentally disabled man for refusing their orders and the agency say's they were justified on accounta the man had a "weapon"....errrrrr, an umbrella.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5h7LjiZxUi-xzorzD8m45XQdzBXtQD99NHST00


He was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct, but officers released him and took him home after a magistrate refused to issue a warrant.
 

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From June 2001 to 30 September 2007, Amnesty International has recorded more than 290 deaths of individuals in the USA and Canada struck by police Tasers. While the organization does not reach conclusions regarding the role of the Taser in each case, it believes the deaths underscore the need for thorough, independent inquiries into their use and effects.
 

"Here we go again"
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The police abuse with tasers is flat out absurd. You read about pre-teenage girls getting tased routinely if they somehow talk back to an egomaniac cop. Or does anyone remember the story a few years ago when police tasered a 6 year old boy? Sickning, but of course they had "no choice". :):)


When police were first given tasers it was under the pretext they could only be used when they were threatened violently and can't subdue the subject otherwise. Of course if you give them an inch, they will take a mile. Now if a corrupt police officer is having a bad day or just wants to feel powerful they will taser you for literally no reason when tasers have been shown time and time again to rarely induce death.
 
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So easy to criticize when you've never had knives or guns pulled on you by seemingly harmless people; the shitheads should have done what they were told.
 

Oh boy!
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2) Meanwhile, in Alabama, officers tase the patootie out of deaf, mentally disabled man for refusing their orders and the agency say's they were justified on accounta the man had a "weapon"....errrrrr, an umbrella.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5h7LjiZxUi-xzorzD8m45XQdzBXtQD99NHST00


He was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct, but officers released him and took him home after a magistrate refused to issue a warrant.

Isn't it pretty easy to charge and arrest almost anyone with disorderly conduct?
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Isn't it pretty easy to charge and arrest almost anyone with disorderly conduct?

Well, yeah.

The Gates arrest in Cambridge was highly visible and at least put a fresh spotlight on how police routinely use D.C. charges as the means to quickly shut down someone who might be verbally abusing them - though otherwise committing no crime.

Harvey Silvergate at Forbes.com is one of many astute observers who has penned some fresh observations in light of the Gates arrest. But lest anyone become unduly distracted by the other aspects of that arrest (Obama inserting himself into the post-arrest scene, etc), this column from this past Wednesday on Forbes.com has numerous legally correct points that could apply to actions of police nationwide.


http://www.forbes.com/2009/07/28/ga...inions-contributors-harvey-a-silverglate.html


Commentary

Prof. Gates' Unconstitutional Arrest

<cite>Harvey A. Silverglate</cite>, 07.28.09, 04:51 PM EDT There's a First Amendment right to be rude to a cop.



The now-infamous Gates story has gone through the familiar media spin-cycle: incident, reaction, response, so on and so forth. Drowned out of this echo chamber has been an all-too-important (and legally controlling) aspect: the imbroglio between Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., and Cambridge Police Sgt. James Crowley has more to do with the limits (or breadth) of the First Amendment than with race and social class.


The issue is not how nasty the discourse between the two might have been, but whether what Professor Gates said--assuming, for argument's sake, the officer's version of events as fact--could by any stretch of both law and imagination constitute a ground for arrest for "disorderly conduct" (the charge leveled) or any other crime. Whether those same words could be censored on a college campus is a somewhat different--though related--question.



First, a quick recap. Gates returned to his Cambridge residence from an overseas trip to find his door stuck shut. With his taxi driver's assistance, he forced the door open. Shortly thereafter, a police officer arrived at the home, adjacent to the Harvard University campus--in my own neighborhood, actually--responding to a reported possible burglary.


Upon arrival, the officer found Gates in his home. He asked Gates to step outside. The professor initially refused, but later opened his door to speak with the officer. Words--the precise nature of which remains in dispute--were exchanged. Gates was arrested for exhibiting "loud and tumultuous behavior."


The police report, however, in Sgt. Crowley's own words, indicates that Gates' alleged tirade consisted of nothing more than harshly worded accusations hurled at the officer for being a racist. The charges were later dropped when the district attorney took charge of the case.


It is not yet entirely clear whether there was a racial element to the initial decision by a woman on the street--working for Harvard Magazine, no less!--to call the police, although that is looking unlikely. It remains disputed whether Sgt. Crowley treated Professor Gates any differently than he would treat a white citizen in the same position.



(In fact, if one accepts Crowley's claim that he dished out to Gates equal treatment under the law, this case stands as a dire warning to all citizens as to the dangers inherent in exercising one's constitutional right to free speech when in an exchange with a police officer--but more on that below.)


Indeed, Crowley did not arrest Gates for breaking and entering, for by then he was clearly convinced that the professor did live in the building. (For one thing, Harvard University Police officers had by that time arrived at the scene, and they easily could have checked not only that Gates was on the faculty, but that he lived in the Harvard-owned residential building. Gates is one of the most widely known faces in the Harvard community.) Instead, Crowley arrested the diminutive and disabled professor (he uses a cane to walk and bears a passing resemblance to the French painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec) for disorderly conduct--the charge of choice when a citizen gives lip to a cop.



---remainder at url link above
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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anyone know when the retard in chief will be talking about this incident on national TV?

just wondering

he might actually have a good point to make this time
 
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Dont cops carry Billy clubs & blackjacks anymore?..I have 2 that belonged to my Great Grandfather.He was a Deputy...Put a hell of a knot on your head thats for sure...Of course back in the 20s they didnt have crazed out dope addicts either but just plain old drunks but seems like a billy club or blackjack could do the same as a tazer.
 

Pro Handi-Craper My Picks are the shit
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Could of just shot him.LOL
 

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This not be good cause this is being mean to the people and a taser can hurt badely. So, just say to the bad cop, don't tase me bro.

:toast:
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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:lol: If anyone on this forum would know, it’s you.

easy, brother

I'm headed out for a low-impact lawn/garden shift while following MLB via the miracle of my Flintstone model Walkman

I don't want to return this evening and find a cyber tussle between two guys who combined are over 150 years old.

Both of you shake yourselves!

And realize that some of us younger fellas are looking to you as potential Role Models for how our lives could be in the next ...ummmmm.....well.......

....how our lives could be later.

:drink:
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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Drunk and acting like a moron....at a BAPTISM PARTY for a child?

If that's not worth a tazin...what is?

I am glad these guys never showed up at one of my parties
of course, all my neighbors are there so there's nobody around who can complain.
 

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Idaho police sodomize man with taser

A report issued Wednesday by Boise Community Ombudsman Pierce Murphy found that a Boise police officer who used a Taser on a suspect's buttocks violated the police department's use-of-force policy.

Boise Police Chief Michael Masterson, in a release, said he agreed with Murphy's conclusion that serious policy violations were made by that officer and another officer who erased a recording of an interview with the suspect at the jail. The two officers, whose names were not released, were among eight officers who responded to the incident in early 2009.

The Boise Police Department did an internal investigation, and both employees were disciplined; details on the discipline were not released. It is considered an internal personnel matter, said police spokeswoman Lynn Hightower.

The use-of-force violation occurred during an arrest at a Boise home; the address and the names of the occupants have not been released. Police were called to the house after a report of a fight. While on their way, they learned that a man inside the woman's residence had just been released from jail. They were also told a 3-year-old boy in the home, according to details provided in Murphy's report.

Upon arrival, the officers heard the sounds of a struggle and voices coming from inside. The officers yelled for someone to open the door, and were greeted with a profane comment by a man in the residence. The officers had to kick and push the door open; the man inside was pushing against the door for more than 80 seconds. Once they gained entry, the officers said the suspect did not comply with their demands to get on the ground and stop resisting.

The suspect said that he was hit three times with a Taser after he was already handcuffed and face-down on the floor. Murphy's investigation found evidence that the suspect was hit twice with the Taser — once in the back before he was handcuffed and once in the buttocks after he was cuffed.

Murphy said the officer who used the Taser -— described as Officer #3 in the report — also coarsely threatened to use the Taser in the man's anus and genitals. Murphy's report says that use of Taser on a man's buttock's does not violate policy in and of itself; the question is whether it was "reasonable and necessary."

Upon Murphy’s request, Idaho State Police investigated the incident to determine if there was any criminal wrong-doing on the part of Officer #3. Idaho State Police forwarded a report to the Ada County Prosecutor’s Office, which did not pursue criminal charges against the officer.

The exchange between Officer #3 and the suspect during the incident was captured on a police officer's recorder. Murphy transcribed some of it in his report:

Officer #3: Do you feel this?

Complainant: Yes, sir.

Officer #3: Do you feel that? That’s my -

Complainant: Okay

Officer #3: -Taser up your ass.

Complainant: Okay

Officer #3: So don’t move.

Complainant: I’m trying not to. I can’t breathe.

"This exchange, especially the complainant’s response, strongly suggests that, at that moment anyway, the Taser was pressed between the Complainant’s buttocks and near his anal area," Murphy wrote in his report on the incident.

Two circular burn marks 1 to 2 centimeters in size were found on the suspect's buttocks, Murphy said.

Officer #3 also threatened to use the Taser on the suspect's genitalia.

Here's more of the transcribed recording of the exchange between Officer #3 and the suspect:

Officer #3: Now do you feel this in your balls?

Complainant: I do, sir. I’m not going to move. I’m not gonna move.

Officer #3 Now I’m gonna tase your balls if you move again.

A minute later, this exchange occurred:

Officer #3: Okay, I’m gonna take this Taser out of your asshole now. Are you going to fight with me?

Complainant: No, not at all, sir.

In the Boise police press release Wednesday, police department leaders said Officer #3's actions and language elevates the seriousness of the violation to conduct unbecoming an officer.

Department officials said they also agreed with the ombudsman's findings that another officer, described as Officer #10, acted improperly when he erased the audio recording of a jail interview with the suspect.

Officer #3 has been with the Boise Police Department five years, while Officer #10 is an 18-year veteran of the department.

At the end of his report, Murphy offered some policy and training recommendations to the Boise Police Department.

— Use-of-force investigation policy review. Establish specific standards and procedures needed for those tasked with investigating reportable uses of force by Boise police officers. "It is important that such acts be investigated and documented using consistent, best practices," he said.

— Training regarding positional asphyxia. During the arrest in question, the suspect was placed face-down on the ground and handcuffed with his hands behind his back and had the weight of three officers on his body. "None of the officers seemed to be aware of the possible danger posed by positional asphyxia," Murphy said.

More taser stories:

http://www.unknownnews.org/cops.html
 
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Apparently the cop's actions and language got the cockroach to shut up and comply; give the cop a raise and let him tase.
 

Life's a bitch, then you die!
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easy, brother

I'm headed out for a low-impact lawn/garden shift while following MLB via the miracle of my Flintstone model Walkman

I don't want to return this evening and find a cyber tussle between two guys who combined are over 150 years old.

Both of you shake yourselves!

And realize that some of us younger fellas are looking to you as potential Role Models for how our lives could be in the next ...ummmmm.....well.......

....how our lives could be later.

:drink:

Easy yourself, if my calculations are correct it’s 129 years of wisdom between punt and me. Now I can’t speak for him but a shake myself after ever piss, does that count?

As for role models, surely you jest. Punt and I about as opposite as you can get. Which means if you’re going to follow us you’ll be really, really confused.

As for the rest of the younger fellas, I doubt they care.

@)
 

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