1. #1436
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  2. #1437
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    Another oath breaking thug wearing a badge and a costume.


  3. #1438
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  4. #1439
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    BREAKING: Cop Charged With Murder for Killing Two People He Accused of Breaking Into Car

    Takoma Park, MD — On Wednesday, the nation was shocked when hearing the news that an unnamed Pentagon Police Officer opened fire on two unarmed individuals, killing them. That officer allegedly thought the two victims were breaking into a car. For two days, the system protected the officer, but times are changing and his protection has run out.

    On Friday morning, Officer David Hall Dixon was identified as the killer cop and was arrested and charged with second-degree murder for killing Dominique Williams, 32, of Hyattsville and James Lionel Johnson, 38, of District Heights.

    The incident unfolded on Wednesday morning when Dixon claimed Johnson and Williams were breaking into a vehicle. Apparently, without warning, Dixon opened fire on the two individuals who then fled in their vehicle. Dixon also faces charges of reckless endangerment because he continued shooting at the vehicle as it drove away.

    The men then drove themselves to the hospital after being shot, but apparently it was too late and they died shortly after they arrived.

    After killing the two individuals — who may be entirely innocent — Dixon told police he thought they were breaking into a car. However, according to NBC 4, police haven’t accused the victims who were killed of crimes in news releases, nor announced charges against the man driving the car who brought them to the hospital.

    A Department of Defense spokeswoman told to WUSA9 that the off-duty Pentagon officer involved in the shooting had been employed with the agency since July 2019. Prior to that, a spokeswoman said, he had served as a federal police officer from 2009-2019 and also as a U.S. Army military policeman and in the U.S. Air Force as a combat crewman.

    The spokesperson also pointed out that Dixon should not have engaged the men as their off-duty law enforcement authority is limited to only a “serious breach of the peace (when violence is being committed or immediately threatened) including assault and threats to kill, injure or maim.

    ”Even if Johnson and Williams were actually committing a crime, it certainly did not rise to the level of immediately harm.

    What’s more, the PFPA policy states that officers cannot fire at moving vehicles either, unless “an employee has a reasonable basis to believe that the vehicle poses an immediate threat of death or serious bodily harm to the employee or others.” This was clearly not the issue either.

    Friday morning, officers with the Takoma Park Police Department arrested Dixon, who was taken into custody without incident.

    The charges as well as the quickness with which they came cannot be understated in this case. It is extremely rare for officers to face murder charges for shootings like this one. What’s more, it is even more rare that the charges come so quickly.

    It took weeks for officer Amber Guyger to be charged even after admitting she walked into the wrong apartment and murder Botham Jean.

    As TFTP has reported, despite horrifying police killings, many of which were captured on video and have rocked the nation, the arrest rate for cops who kill people in official capacity remains as low as ever. According to reports, since 2005, just 126 police officers have been arrested for murder or manslaughter in relation to an on-duty killing.

    Of those 126, just 44 have been convicted, with 31 of their cases still pending, and just seven cops total have been convicted of murder. The other 37 cops were convicted on charges ranging from manslaughter to official misconduct, with many of them receiving no jail time.

    Though Dixon was off-duty at the time he killed Johnson and Williams, he was acting in his official capacity as a police officer up to and including shooting the two men with his department-issued weapon.


    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/of...king-into-car/



  5. #1440
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    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/04/...hild-molester/

    Patrick M. Rose, 66, was arraigned Tuesday in the West Roxbury division of Boston Municipal Court on 11 counts of rape of a child and five counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, the office of Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins said in a statement.

  6. #1441
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    Quote Originally Posted by bruceBRUCEbruce View Post
    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/04/...hild-molester/

    Patrick M. Rose, 66, was arraigned Tuesday in the West Roxbury division of Boston Municipal Court on 11 counts of rape of a child and five counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, the office of Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins said in a statement.

    The union president is a pedo and they knew for decades, but did nothing. Criminal pigs protected by blue line of silence and privilege. Disgusting.


    A Globe investigation has found that the Boston Police Department in 1995 filed a criminal complaint against him for sexual assault on a 12-year-old, and, even after the complaint was dropped, proceeded with an internal investigation that concluded that he likely committed a crime. Despite that finding, Rose kept his badge, remained on patrol for another 21 years, and rose to power in the union that represents patrol officers.

    Today Boston police are fighting to keep secret how the department handled the allegations against Rose, and what, if any, penalty he faced. Over the years, this horrific case has come full circle: The father who brought his daughter in last summer to report abuse by Rose was the boy allegedly abused at age 12 in the 1995 case. The department’s lack of administrative action back then may have left Rose free to offend again and again, from one generation to the next.

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    Maryland Becomes First State Ever to Repeal Police Officer Bill of Rights—Ending Blue Privilege

    Maryland — For decades, Maryland and dozens of other states across the union have upheld a special set of rights for cops which citizens do not get to enjoy. It was called the police bill of rights and it shielded cops from accountability by blocking civilian inquiries into misconduct on the force and erasing records of complaints filed against officers after a period of time. But this special privilege and above the law status is no longer.

    According to the Maryland Coalition for Justice and Police Accountability, the special rights enjoyed by police in the state are vast. They include:

    - Generous protections during the investigation of misconduct
    - Limits on what discipline can be imposed for certain infractions
    - Strict time limits on alleging a complaint, including for police brutality.
    - Allowing only other law enforcement officers to investigate misconduct
    - Allowing a delay before questioning an officer about misconduct
    - Expungement of disciplinary records

    “As a result, only a very small percentage of complaints actually result in discipline. At the very least, we must know that law enforcement agencies are taking police discipline seriously, and not protecting officers who engage in misconduct,” the group wrote in a statement.

    A battle to remove this blue privilege in Maryland has been brutal and came to a head on Friday when Governor Larry Hogan vetoed legislation that was set to end the police bill of rights. The governor vetoed three of the five bills in the police accountability package, claiming the legislation would be devastating to police recruitment and public confidence.

    “These bills would undermine the goal that I believe we share of building transparent, accountable, and effective law enforcement institutions and instead further erode police morale, community relationships, and public confidence,” Hogan said in a statement. “They will result in great damage to police recruitment and retention, posing significant risks to public safety throughout our state.”

    If people quit being cops because they will actually have to be held accountable for violating a citizen’s rights, this is a good thing, However, police state proponents like Hogan keep screaming it from the rooftops as a reason not to follow through with police reform measures.

    Because they held no water, Hogan’s vetoes fell on the battleground Saturday when the state legislature voted to override all three vetoes and Maryland became the first state in the country to end the police bill of rights.

    On top of holding officers accountable for their actions, the legislation also revamps the process for no-knock warrants forcing officers to apply for approval by a supervisor and the State’s Attorney and between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m., outside of “exigent circumstances.”

    Police officers are now also required to use force only if it is “necessary and proportional” to the situation. The new legislation states that such force can only be used to halt “an imminent threat of physical injury” or to “effectuate a legitimate law enforcement objective.” If an officer has been found to use excessive force, they can now be subject to a criminal penalty. The training and use-of-force limits begin in July of next year, while body cameras will be statewide by July 2025, according to a report from the Intelligencer.

    The new legislation also opens up the police disciplinary process to civilians by establishing local administrative charging committees which will recommend what sort of internal discipline a cop should face.

    Previously, officers’ discipline records have been shielded from public scrutiny as well but thanks to this new legislation, bad cops can no longer hide their records from the citizens they serve.

    “Maryland is leading the country in transforming our broken policing system,” Maryland House of Delegates Speaker Adrienne Jones wrote in a tweet Saturday. “Now, for the first time in our nation’s history, the rights of officers will not be held above the rights of individuals, and policing in Maryland will be transparent and citizen-centered.”

    Hopefully, this legislation leads to real change and states across the country stop treating cops like a protected class that can lay waste to rights with impunity.


    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/ma...ill-of-rights/

  8. #1443
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    NO JAIL for Cop Who Admitted He Raped Woman in Patrol Car to Avoid Arrest

    Wilmington, PA — In October of 2018, Tyneka Cephas had driven down to Wilmington to visit the grave of her daughter Tynesia who had tragically been killed at age 16 in a random shooting in 2017. Her pilgrimage of grief morphed into a nightmare of sexual abuse, however, when Wilmington Police Cpl. Thomas R. Oliver Jr. pulled her into his car and proceeded to sexually violate her.

    Now, after fighting for her abuser to be held accountable for the last 2 years, Cephas found out that Oliver will not be going to jail. Instead, he was given a year of probation, despite admitting to the entire situation.

    “It was a horrid thing,“ Cephas said of the incident. “He treated me as if I was a prostitute.”

    “I had just come up here from Georgetown, Delaware, because it was my daughter’s 18th birthday. She was a victim of gun violence and we were celebrating her birthday at the gravesite,” she explained to reporters in a press conference.

    That day, Oliver, an 11-year veteran of the force, decided to drive up to Cephas as she walked down the 700 block of East Ninth Street on the way to her daughter’s gravesite. When Oliver pulled up, he told Cephas to sit in the front seat of his car. He then told Cephas she had a warrant for her arrest, while simultaneously exposing himself to her.

    He then issued the ultimatum; perform oral sex, or face arrest. He then grabbed her by the head and forced her onto his exposed penis. These facts are undisputed by both parties.

    Cephas would then file a complaint and an investigation was launched into the allegations.

    Months after the incident, Oliver would be arrested and charged with second-degree rape, sexual extortion, and having sex with a person in police custody. He was ordered held on $66,000 cash bail following the nearly five-month investigation.

    At the time, Police Chief Robert J. Tracy called the charges “deeply troubling and disheartening. The charge that one of our officers abused his authority to victimize a member of the public in this manner is sickening.”

    Fast-forward to this month, however, and the deeply troubling and disheartening act by one of their officers, has been swept under the rug. Oliver beat all charges except official misconduct and was sentenced to just one year of probation — this, in spite of the fact that he admitted to the entire ordeal.

    “It’s all undisputed,” Cephas’ lawyer Emeka Igwe said. “The officer does not dispute that this horrible incident took place while he was in uniform in his patrol car and he’s even admitted that it was wrong and he’s apologized to Ms. Cephas in court, but yet, the mayor of Wilmington and the police chief have yet to reach out to Ms. Cephas.”

    The defense likely claimed that Cephas somehow consented to the act, which is as asinine as it is insidious.

    Oliver had a gun, handcuffs, and threatened to throw her in jail when he demanded oral sex.

    When armed individuals can chain a person’s hands or kidnap them, there is no reasonable manner in which that person could consent to having sex. Even if there was no struggle and the arrested person goes along with police demands, when you are under duress and kidnapped against your will, there is no consenting.

    Despite the clearly immoral grounds for such encounters, in a sample of 158 police officers who’ve been charged with sexual assault, sexual battery, or unlawful sexual contact with somebody under their control, at least 26 have been acquitted or had charges dropped based on this consent defense, according to a Buzzfeed review of a Buffalo News database of more than 700 law enforcement officers accused of sexual misconduct.

    These numbers are indeed startling and Cephas hopes her lawsuit will prevent cops from making future victims.

    “I just hope this don’t happen to nobody else and if it does, I hope they can bring it forth, because when people are in power and have authority, people don’t believe us,” she said.


    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/no...-avoid-arrest/

  9. #1444
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    More ignorant, oath breaking pigs who don't know the law or the US Constitution. Listen to how these blue line gang members attempt to criminalize constitutionally protected, LEGAL activity and display their ignorance to appease a bunch of offended snowflakes. Pigs.



    Original video:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ALpdNqcKh4

  11. #1446
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    Dozens Freed After NYPD Detective Charged for Framing Innocent People for Drug Crimes

    Brooklyn, NY — Charges against the now-disgraced NYPD detective Joseph Franco are being welcomed by the families of dozens of New Yorkers as it is leading to the dismissal of their family members’ charges. Franco was reportedly caught framing innocent individuals and now Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez’s Conviction Review Unit this week asked for the dismissal of 27 felony convictions and 63 misdemeanor convictions based on Franco’s corrupt policing.

    According to ABC 7, Franco has been indicted in Manhattan for perjury, official misconduct and other charges in connection with four incidents whereby he allegedly framed numerous individuals for making narcotics transactions.

    According to the Conviction Review Unit, the dozens of cases are being dismissed because Franco’s crimes have discredited his witness testimonies.

    “Knowingly and repeatedly framing innocent people obliterates the credibility of any police officer and proving perjury in such circumstances is rare,” Gonzalez said. “After a grand jury reviewed the evidence and indicted former Detective Franco, I have lost confidence in his work. His cases in Brooklyn are over a decade old, which limited our ability to reinvestigate them, but I cannot in good faith stand by convictions that principally relied on his testimony. Integrity and credibility are at the heart of the justice system and prerequisites for community trust.”

    After Gonzalez moved to dismiss cases under his office, Judge Matthew D’Emic moved to dismiss dozens of similar drug convictions tied to the corrupt cop. Brooklyn Criminal Court Judge Keisha Espinal followed suit vacating more than 50 drug convictions.

    As ABC 7 reports:

    "The cases stemmed from arrests that happened when Franco was assigned to Brooklyn commands between 2004 and 2011. All but one of the 90 convictions were obtained by way of a guilty plea.

    Most of those convicted for a felony were sentenced to between six months and a year in jail, with the longest sentence being three years in prison. Most of those convicted for a misdemeanor were sentenced to terms ranging from time served to 90 days in jail.

    The CRU reviewed all convictions where Franco was involved, and cases where he was the primary undercover and his testimony was necessary for a potential hearing or trial were flagged for dismissal."

    As for Franco, he is currently awaiting trial on dozens of counts of first degree perjury and other related charges. Despite facing over a dozen charges in April 2019, and again in July 2019, Franco was not fired from the department until a year later in May of 2020.

    “It shows you the unbelievable ripple effect that one individual who wears a shield can have on lives of hundreds, if not thousands,” said Aida Leisenring, a criminal defense attorney with Barket Epstein. “Overturning a wrongful conviction is not a substitute for justice, because the damage has already been done. Filing a lawsuit against the NYPD and receiving financial reparations for that, that’s a step towards justice.”

    Unfortunately, there is no shortage of police officers like detective Franco. Here at the Free Thought Project, we report on cops who frame people frequently. One such cop, whose actions were similar to the actions of Franco was Jackson County Sheriff’s Deputy Zachary Wester.

    Wester was arrested in 2019 after video surfaced of this drug enforcement cop planting meth on an innocent grandmother. After the release of that video, other videos surfaced, showing the officer planting drugs on other folks as well.

    While it is no question that folks will claim that drugs found on them or in their possession “aren’t theirs” and “they don’t know how that got there,” nearly all of Wester’s cases had this characteristic. The videos showed that people were utterly shocked when Wester claimed to have found drugs in their vehicles. While a single person may have been lying, when everyone reacts the exact same way, something is up.

    This characteristic led to assistant state attorney at the 14th Judicial Circuit, Christina Pumphrey, investigating the corrupt cop, and she discovered he’d been conducting this framing scheme for some time.

    As a result of Pumphrey’s actions which led to Wester’s arrest, 119 people were exonerated and freed from jail.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/do...r-drug-crimes/

  12. #1447
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    Port Allen officer arrested after stun-gunning handcuffed man inside police vehicle

    A Port Allen police officer stunned a 67-year-old with a Taser as the man screamed for help while handcuffed in the backseat of a police vehicle during an arrest last month, according to a probable cause affidavit accusing the officer of felony battery and malfeasance in office.

    The incident happened early morning on March 29 as Officer Nolan Dehon III was detaining a man on the 1100 block of Avenue C, states the report obtained Monday by The Advocate.

    Officers responded after receiving a call about a man breaking windows at a home, the report alleges. Police say the man suspected of the disturbance surrendered to officers upon their arrival.

    After bringing the man to a police vehicle, the report states other officers heard him call for help moments later.

    “Scream again, go ahead, scream,” Dehon allegedly said before pressing his Taser into the man’s body and activating it twice in 10 seconds while the man sat in the vehicle’s backseat. He then told the man “You understand me” before shutting the door, the report states.

    Though the report doesn't describe the severity of the man's injuries, it says the device sent 50,000 volts of electricity into his body and that he was brought to a hospital after the encounter.

    A West Baton Rouge internal affairs detective wrote in the report that the man hadn’t refused any of Dehon’s commands, nor did he become physically combative with any officers at the scene. He wrote that the man initially had trouble getting into the vehicle because of his height.

    Port Allen Police Chief Corey Hicks said Monday that the man filed a complaint after the encounter, which led to the investigation. He said in a statement he has a "zero tolerance" policy for such incidents.

    Dehon, 45, was issued a summons for one count each of aggravated battery and malfeasance in office. He remains on leave.

    The encounter was captured on officers' body cameras though it hasn't been publicly released.

    District Attorney Tony Clayton called the footage “highly disturbing” and said he plans to bring the case before a grand jury soon.

    Dehon was rehired by the department in February, but it is unclear how long he had served under former Police Chief Esdron Brown’s administration.

    He was booked into the West Baton Rouge Parish Jail, but an online roster didn't list him as an inmate on Monday afternoon.


    https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_ro...0b58954d7.html

  13. #1448
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    Child porn found on Fresno federal police officer’s phone, investigators say


    https://www.yourcentralvalley.com/ne...stigators-say/

  14. #1449
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    March 16, 2021 - The City of Tupelo, Mississippi released police bodycam video from the detainment of innocent local businessman Wesley Wells. The city suspended two officers without pay for violating department bodycam policy, but the officers have now been reinstated. During the incident officer body cameras were turned off and audio is missing from some of the footage. The video starts with an officer speaking on the radio about "a white male in front of Dick's Sporting Goods" before exiting his patrol vehicle and confronting Mr. Wells.

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    Blue Wall Crumbling as Second State Ends Qualified Immunity for Bad Cops

    Santa Fe, NM — As TFTP reported last month, in an unprecedented move, the New York City Council passed sweeping legislation to go after bad cops by removing qualified immunity, ushering in a new era for police accountability. This move was revolutionary as they were the first major area to make such a drastic change — until now.

    Going after bad cops is now gaining momentum and this month, New Mexico became the second state in the country to abolish qualified immunity. On Wednesday April 7, Governor Lujan Grisham signed the New Mexico Civil Rights Act into law which ended qualified immunity in the state. It also allows for those who have been wrongfully convicted to go after the ones responsible for their violated rights.

    While that sounds like a no-brainer, as in, everyone who has been wrongfully convicted should be able to sue those behind their incarceration, qualified immunity made it difficult.

    “I came within nine days of execution for a crime I didn’t commit and qualified immunity prevented me from holding responsible the sheriff’s deputies who committed egregious misconduct and stole my freedom,” said New Mexico exoneree Ron Keine said, according to the Innocence Project. “I commend the legislature and Governor for finally addressing the injustice of qualified immunity. I hope those few officers who prey on the public will think twice before victimizing the people of New Mexico.”

    Before HB4, named the New Mexico Civil Rights Act, citizens had no way to enforce their personal rights and privileges granted by the state constitution when going up against an agent of the state.

    For those who may be unaware, qualified immunity is the legal doctrine that shields government officials from being sued for discretionary actions performed within their official capacity, unless their actions violated “clearly established” federal law or constitutional rights.

    The Supreme Court created qualified immunity in 1982 which granted all government officials immunity for violating constitutional and civil rights unless the victims of those violations can show that the rights were “clearly established.”

    This asinine law has shielded countless bad cops from accountability and states are finally attempting to change it.

    “There is wide agreement across ideological lines that qualified immunity is simply bad policy,” said Burly Cain, Executive Director of Americans for Prosperity New Mexico. “When a police officer acting in an official government capacity violates a citizen’s constitutional rights, qualified immunity protects them from liability. The New Mexico Civil Rights Act finally fixes this injustice.”

    The new act has received bipartisan support, according to the Innocence Project, from a coalition of organizations including the Innocence Project, Americans for Prosperity, American Civil Liberties Union, Institute for Justice, National Police Accountability Project, and Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, founders of Ben & Jerry’s.

    “Qualified immunity is a court-created doctrine that allows public officials to escape accountability after they engage in misconduct, even when their actions send an innocent person to prison. The New Mexico Civil Rights Act represents an historic culture shift in the fight for real accountability in law enforcement, and we applaud Governor Lujan Grisham for signing it into law,” said Laurie Roberts, a State Policy Advocate for the Innocence Project.

    “HB 4 is an incredible victory for the people of New Mexico. For those harmed by government officials, it has often been impossible to hold anyone accountable. Fortunately, with this Civil Rights Act we are tipping the scales toward justice,” said Barron Jones, Senior Policy Strategist for the ACLU of New Mexico.

    As stated above, this push by New Mexico was preceded by New York City and similar paradigm shifts are gaining traction across the country. In Illinois, House Bill 1727, introduced by Rep. Curtis Tarver sets out to incite change as well. The aptly titled Bad Apples in Law Enforcement Accountability Act aims to end qualified immunity for cops who violate the rights of citizens in Illinois.

    Naturally, there are critics in law enforcement who don’t take too kindly to being held accountable. These folks want a blank check to continue violating the rights of citizens with impunity. These folks have been outspoken and continue to fear monger, claiming it will lead to an exodus from policing and it will stifle recruiting.

    In other words, telling cops that they should not beat up and kill citizens because it could lead to them being held accountable, is bad for recruiting more cops.

    However, as TFTP has reported, that is a good thing. If less people are attracted to the job of police officer because they know they can’t brutalize the public with impunity, society will only be better off for it.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/ne...fied-immunity/

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  22. #1457
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    "What is your authorized business here?" asks the ignorant POS wearing a costume and badge. Exercising Constitutional rights is "authorized business," but these jackboots have all but forgotten their oaths or are simply ignorant of the what the Bill of Rights entails. Typical low IQ pigs.


  23. #1458
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    Cop Used Badge to Carry Out Armed Robbery of Legal Cannabis Warehouse, Disguising It as a Raid

    Los Angeles, CA — When the owners of a Los Angeles marijuana distribution business noticed a marked Ford Explorer sheriff’s unit and three armed men in their driveway back in 2018, they had no idea why police would be there as they were a completely legal operation. Being innocent was no defense, however, because the men behind the badge carrying out the raid were bonafide criminals and robbed them of $2 million in cash and cannabis.

    The lead officer on this armed robbery disguised as a raid was Marc Antrim, who was assigned to the Temple City sheriff’s station with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s department at the time of the incident. This week, Antrim was sentenced to 7 years in prison for his role in that raid.

    “The seriousness of the crime could not be overstated,” U.S. District Judge Virginia A. Phillips said during a court hearing at which she handed down the sentence. The heist, which “sounded like a movie script,” was “tragic” for the victims and eroded “the public’s trust (in law enforcement),” the judge said.

    Antrim, like so many other cops, was a bad one. In October of 2018, he decided to use his authority as a police officer to rob an innocent cannabis distribution company under the color of law.

    Antrim, who was off duty, and two other criminals — Kevin McBride, 45, and Matthew James Perez, 44 — checked out an LASD SUV and drove to the cannabis distribution center. When they arrived at the facility, Antrim and his fellow criminals were met by another accomplice, Daniel Aguilera, who was driving a rental truck to help haul off the marijuana and $600,000 cash they were about to steal.

    According to a statement from the Department of Justice, the incident unfolded as follows:

    "During the early morning hours of October 29, 2018, Antrim and his co-conspirators dressed as armed LASD deputies and approached the warehouse in an LASD Ford Explorer. Upon arrival, Antrim flashed his LASD badge and a fake search warrant to the security guards to gain entry to the warehouse. To perpetuate the ruse that they were legitimate law enforcement officers, Antrim and two fake deputies sported LASD clothing, wore duty belts, and carried firearms. One fake deputy also visibly carried a long gun to further intimidate the guards into submission.

    At the beginning of the two-hour robbery, Antrim and his co-conspirators detained the three warehouse security guards in the cage of the LASD Ford Explorer. Soon after the guards were detained, a fourth man arrived at the warehouse in a large rental truck, and all four men began loading marijuana into the truck.

    When Los Angeles Police Department officers legitimately responded to a call for service at the warehouse during the robbery, Antrim falsely told the LAPD officers that he was an LASD narcotics deputy conducting a legitimate search. To facilitate the sham, Antrim handed his phone to one of the LAPD officers so that the police officer could speak to someone on the phone claiming to be Antrim’s LASD sergeant. The individual on the phone was not Antrim’s sergeant, and Antrim did not have a legitimate search warrant for the warehouse.

    After LAPD officers left the warehouse, other co-conspirators arrived and the robbery continued, allowing the fake law enforcement crew to steal even more marijuana and two large safes containing over half a million dollars in cash."

    All those who participated in the raid have been sentenced to prison. Christopher Myung Kim, 31, a former employee of the warehouse was also sentenced for his role in planning it. Because Antrim rolled over on Kim in court, and in spite of the fact that Antrim was a cop at the time, Antrim’s sentence was half that of Kim’s.

    Even after abusing his badge and betraying the public’s trust in a most egregious manner, Antrim was still given a sweet deal.


    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/co...-it-as-a-raid/

  24. #1459
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    Pignorance and a bunch of coplspaining by another pig named "Right Here." The staff at the public building are none too smart either. Finally, after multiple requests by the journalist, a supervisor arrives who actually knows the law and educates the ignorant pig and public servants.


  25. #1460
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  26. #1461
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    One pig gets a paid vacation and two others are reassigned.
    Internal investigation (eye roll) and lawsuit pending.


  27. #1462
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    More POS oath breakers choose to violate a man's rights rather than operate within the boundaries of the law that they swore to uphold and protect. "This is fixing to get real bad for you," says the ignorant jackboot as he proceeds to lie, copsplain and illegally search the man. Pigs.


  28. #1463
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  30. #1465
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    Quote Originally Posted by b1slickguy View Post


  31. #1466
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  32. #1467
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  33. #1468
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  34. #1469
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  35. #1470
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    Cop Arrested for Invading Woman’s Home, Holding Her Hostage in Basement, Beating Her for Hours

    Louisville, KY — The Louisville Metropolitan Police Department (LMPD) has gotten a lot of attention since several of their officers broke into an innocent couple’s home and murdered accomplished EMT, Breonna Taylor. But under the radar, multiple other crimes have taken place and have received little to no media coverage.

    Just last month, TFTP reported on the case of LMPD officer Brad Schuhmann, 32, who was arrested for his role in a child sex ring run by several LMPD cops. Despite horrifying details coming out in the case against Schuhmann, he was granted a sweetheart plea deal in which he will avoid jail for sexually abusing a little girl in the department’s explorer program.

    Another cop from this department, who took part in the murder of Breonna Taylor, officer Brett Hankison was accused of picking up drunk women from a local bar in his police cruiser, and raping them. Once again, due to the horrifying crimes of officer Robert Jones Jr., the LMPD is back on the radar of TFTP but receiving very little coverage in the media. Jones was arrested over the weekend at his home in Louisville and is now faces a laundry list of charges.

    Jones is accused of invading a woman’s home, holding a gun to her head, and beating her for several hours while keeping her prisoner in the basement. He now faces charges of first-degree burglary, first-degree unlawful imprisonment, first-degree wanton endangerment and fourth-degree domestic violence assault causing minor injury, according to court records.

    According to court records, on April 11, 2021, Jones forced his way into his victim’s home while armed with a handgun. Once inside, all hell broke loose as this monster locked the door behind him and attacking his victim.

    “A physical altercation ensued in the living room that continued into the bedroom,” the citation said. “Once the bedroom, (Jones) took victim’s handgun that was on the nightstand and secured it…(Jones) straddled and pinned victim on the bed.”

    Likely thinking she was about to die, the victim “yelled for Siri to call 911.” Unfortunately, the Apple device did not hear her and the abuse continued.

    As the Courier Journal reports:

    "Jones then placed his hand over the victim’s mouth and placed a handgun to her forehead, according to the citation.

    He also placed his elbow and forearm on the victim’s throat and chest area while on the bed, the citation said.

    Once they moved back to the living room, Jones allegedly demanded the victim’s phone and tried to access it.

    The two struggled at the top of the steps, with the victim then falling down the steps and landing against drywall, damaging it, the citation said.

    Jones led the victim to a back room in the basement, closed the door behind them and blocked the victim from exiting as he continued to berate and “accuse the victim of cheating,” the citation said.

    He also allegedly struck the victim multiple times in the hand, wrist and feet and restrained her, the citation said."

    According to the victim, this abuse lasted for several hours and every time she attempted to break free, she was body slammed and held down. According to the victim, Jones apparently “began to apologize” once he saw the “immediate swelling and bruising” he caused to her face.

    According to the report, Jones then began coaching his victim on “what lie she could tell to explain how she received the injury.”

    Before fleeing the victim’s residence, Jones allegedly grabbed the woman by her throat so hard that it left his hand print on her neck. On Friday, the woman finally got up enough courage to file a protective order against her abuser and Jones was arrested later that day.

    Jones was arraigned on Saturday at which time he was ordered to turn in all of his weapons and have no contact with the victim. His bond was set at $30,000. It is unclear if he posted bond as of the writing of this article.

    “The department fully respects the judicial process, but to be clear, acts of domestic violence by employees will not be tolerated at any level,” Louisville Metro Police Chief Erika Shields said following Jones’ arrest.

    However, despite the overwhelming physical evidence in the case — gun barrel marks on the victim’s face, multiple contusions from punches, bruises from her neck to her ankles — Jones has not been fired. LMPD spokeswoman Alicia Smiley said the PIU is “conducting a thorough and ongoing investigation of this incident” and that Jones has merely been reassigned.



    https://thefreethoughtproject.com/lm...ome-torturing/

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