Charlotte police officer who fatally shot Keith Scott ‘acted lawfully,’ won’t be charged 

The district attorney says the shooting was deemed “justified” and lawful.

Charlotte police officer who fatally shot Keith Scott ‘acted lawfully,’ won’t be charged – The Washington Post

Bullshit.

Or to put it another way, if this was justified then why do we even pretend to have rules cops have to follow? Clearly they have a license to kill at whim and are 100% unresponsible for any damage their violent crimes cause.

New Orleans cop had secret life for years as serial sexual predator, police say 

White’s star in the department dimmed somewhat after he was one of several officers involved in the controversial 2009 shooting of Adolph Grimes III in the 6th Ward. The Police Department later cleared him and seven other officers in the case.

Typical. The police always clear and cover up for the violent crimes of their own.

According to jail records, White was rebooked Monday on first-degree rape, four counts of second-degree rape, one count of simple kidnapping, one count of false imprisonment, two counts of indecent behavior with a juvenile, two counts of molestation of a juvenile, four counts of sexual battery and one count of possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number.

The gun count adds another element to the allegations against White. Police alleged in a warrant that they found a .38-caliber handgun with an obliterated serial number inside a bag in his locker at the 2nd District Station.

When queried, police said, “White stated he received the gun from a citizen in 2007, and he placed the gun in his bag and he forgot about it.”

‘Model’ New Orleans cop had secret life for years as serial sexual predator, police say | Crime/Police | theadvocate.com

This is what a large metropolitan police department refers to as a model officer. Typical.

Most police departments in this country are nothing more than organized, uniformed, gangs of unrepentant, violent, habitual, criminals.

Shooter refers to murder as just ‘another piece of trash off the street’ 

One of the witnesses to the shooting was 13-year-old James Cooper, who told the Gazette-Mail on Tuesday morning that he saw Pulliam kill his friend. 

…Another friend, Teonno White, 14, …said he’s had run-ins with Pulliam in the past, when Pulliam would “pick on” his younger brother.

“One time I went over there to talk to him about it, I said, ‘You’ve got to quit picking on my little brother, that doesn’t look right,’” White said.

“He said, ‘Get the [expletive] off my property.’ He said I need to go on with my nappy Latino self. He’s just a real bad guy.”

White said he’s called the police about Pulliam before, and was told to avoid the man.

[For those counting, that’s policing FAIL number one in this story]

….Caleb Burgess was working at the Dollar General when officers responded Monday night.

….He said police initially forced Burgess and another employee to the ground, guns pointed, until they confirmed the store was empty.

[policing FAIL number two – stay tuned for more I’m sure!]

Charleston Gazette-Mail

hmmm

 

Mississippi residents unsure of controversial billboard’s intent – CNN.com

A controversial billboard in Pearl, Mississippi, shows the famous “Two Minute Warning” picture with Trump’s campaign slogan “Make America Great Again.” What does it mean?

Mississippi residents unsure of controversial billboard’s intent – CNN.com

If you have to ask what this billboard means you will never understand it.

Police fire water cannon at Dakota pipeline protesters in freezing weather

Police fire water cannon at Dakota pipeline protesters in freezing weather | Reuters

There need to be charges against the police.
Law enforcement is not only not keeping the peace, they are posing clear and present danger to thousands of the citizenry.
Hope the first nations successfully sue every law enforcement agency present at these atrocities into the ground.

LAPD will not help deport immigrants under Trump, chief says 

Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said Monday that he has no plans to change the LAPD ’s stance on immigration enforcement, despite President-elect Donald Trump ’s pledge to toughen federal immigration laws and deport millions of people upon taking office.

...“I don’t intend on doing anything different,” he said. “We are not going to engage in law enforcement activities solely based on somebody’s immigration status. We are not going to work in conjunction with Homeland Security on deportation efforts. That is not our job, nor will I make it our job.”

LAPD will not help deport immigrants under Trump, chief says – LA Times

hmmm

Medical Marijuana and Gun Laws Collide

Because it can make them “irrational and unpredictable.”

If you have a medical marijuana card, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals says that you can’t buy a gun.

The court ruled 3-0 on Wednesday that a ban preventing medical marijuana card holders from purchasing firearms is not in violation of the Second Amendment, the Associated Press reports. There are nine western states under the appeals court’s jurisdiction, including Nevada, where the case originated.

Medical Marijuana and Gun Laws Collide

hmmm

Police arrest Colorado Springs boy accused of stabbing fellow sixth-grader 

An 11-year-old boy accused of stabbing Kyler Nipper with a pencil in their middle school hallway has been arrested on suspicion of second-degree assault, the Colorado Springs Police Department said Tuesday.

Police arrest Colorado Springs boy accused of stabbing fellow sixth-grader | Colorado Springs Gazette, News

Seriously? With a pencil?

Since When Did Police Officers Replace the Principal’s Office? 

School administrators are increasingly relying on law enforcement to keep students in line, and the results can be dire.

Take the case of Michael Davis, a five-year-old student with disabilities in the Stockton Unified School District.  A senior police officer in the school district’s police department decided to “scare him straight” after Michael acted out in his classroom, and the situation quickly spiraled out of control.

When Michael got upset and could not calm down, the officer zip-tied Michael’s hands and feet and took him to a mental health facility. Michael’s family filed a lawsuit, and the police officer was finally dismissed from the department four years later, shortly after the family settled with the district for $125,000.

…Police officers are ineffective substitutes for counselors or other adults trained to work with young people who need guidance more than harsh discipline. 

…Many schools have called the police to enforce minor violations like “disruption,” “disturbing the peace,” vandalism, tardiness, and inappropriate use of electronic devices — hardly criminal offenses.

…In the San Bernardino Unified School District, for example, campus officers arrested around 30,000 students between 2005 and 2014, mostly for minor infractions like tagging and disobeying curfews.

…These policies disproportionately target students of color and young people with disabilities, unnecessarily feeding them into the criminal justice system. Black students are three times as likely as white students to face school-related arrest. Students with disabilities are three times as likely as students without disabilities to be arrested on campus.

Since When Did Police Officers Replace the Principal’s Office? | American Civil Liberties Union

Aghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!

That’s our f’ing future we are warping and destroying!!!!

Bail on NM ballot: Should money determine freedom?

By the time his case was dismissed last month for lack of evidence, Chudzinski was living in Albuquerque homeless shelters and eating meals at free kitchens. His motorhome with most of his possessions trapped inside sat on an impound lot, accruing fees he also couldn’t afford.

…The details of Chudzinski’s story might seem extreme, but time spent in jail due to financial hardship as a person’s case wends through the courts is hardly rare in New Mexico. Hundreds of people with low bonds like Chudzinksi’s sat in the Bernalillo County jail for three days or more during July, August and September, according to reports compiled for Bernalillo County and provided to New Mexico In Depth and Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting.

…The nation’s justice system rests on the premise that people are innocent until proven guilty. Yet commercial bail programs undermine that promise: those with money may go free no matter how dangerous they are while non-violent, low-income people often sit behind bars waiting for their trials.

…The amendment on the New Mexico ballot would bar judges from holding non-dangerous people in jail solely because they can’t pay their way out. It also would allow them to deny bail to defendants who are proven dangerous.

…Foster cites two concerns with the cash bail system. First, poor people are treated differently from people with access to money who have similar criminal histories and are charged with similar crimes, she says. That’s a violation of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

“We (also) worry that people who are held pre-trial may feel compelled to plead guilty to an offense for which they may not be guilty just to get out of jail,” she says.

…Chudzinski didn’t have the cash to claim his motorhome when he was released from jail in July. Daily impound fees reached $1,400 while he sat behind bars. When he left jail, he had nowhere to live.

He faces a potential forfeiture proceeding on the motorhome because he can’t pay the impound fees. It is unclear what his options are.

I had a lot of personal pictures and just financial records from businesses that I owned, personal financial records, things that I wanted: tools that I’ve had for 40 years,” he says. “Just lots and lots of personal things that are now gone. And I doubt that I will ever see them again.”

They also point to studies that show low-level defendants with minimal criminal histories are more likely to lose jobs, housing and custody of their children after two or three days in jail. And low-level defendants are more likely to commit new crimes if they are jailed for longer than 24 hours, the studies show.

Bail on NM ballot: Should money determine freedom?

Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

Zero mention that it is the court/police imposed impound fees that made this man homeless after the charges were dropped. Not a single reference to this in the entire article. It seems like an obvious part of the problem. The man effectively lost his home and all his worldly possessions to fees imposed upon him because the system assumed he was not innocent. Fees that are not dropped upon his release without charges let alone conviction.

Mass. cop’s wife faked home robbery, blamed Black Lives Matter, police say 

The house had been tagged with graffiti that appeared to reference the Black Lives Matter movement, which Maria Daly said had been left by the alleged intruders

Mass. cop’s wife faked home robbery, blamed Black Lives Matter, police say – CBS News

Exonerated or not the optics of this are terrible. The officer should be suspended without pay as along as he lives in the same residence with this woman.

Flint Must Seek Permission From Rick Snyder Appointed Board Before Suing Rick Snyder

The Flint Receivership Transition Advisory Board passed a resolution on March 31 eliminating the city administrator’s ability to initiate litigation without first getting approval from the board. Flint’s Receivership Transition Advisory Board, or RTAB, was put in place to have veto power on budgets after the city’s last emergency manager left town in April 2015. The panel’s members are all appointees of Snyder. The board’s action came seven days after the city of Flint filed a notice in the state Court of Claims preserving its right to sue the state over the city’s water becoming contaminated with toxic lead.

Flint Must Seek Permission From Rick Snyder Appointed Board Before Suing Rick Snyder | The Intellectualist

Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrr