Internal LAPD reports show body camera misuse more widespread than chief alleges https://t.co/B3aFLmTDAN
— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) September 21, 2023
Internal LAPD reports show body camera misuse more widespread than chief alleges https://t.co/B3aFLmTDAN
— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) September 21, 2023
He locked his keys in his own car. He was trying to get it unlocked with a coathanger.
— 🥀_ Imposter_🥀 (@Imposter_Edits) September 20, 2023
Police ignored everyone on the scene and went straight to escilation. pic.twitter.com/IVpaLW217u
going4roses said:He locked his keys in his own car. He was trying to get it unlocked with a coathanger.
— 🥀_ Imposter_🥀 (@Imposter_Edits) September 20, 2023
Police ignored everyone on the scene and went straight to escilation. pic.twitter.com/IVpaLW217u
oski003 said:going4roses said:He locked his keys in his own car. He was trying to get it unlocked with a coathanger.
— 🥀_ Imposter_🥀 (@Imposter_Edits) September 20, 2023
Police ignored everyone on the scene and went straight to escilation. pic.twitter.com/IVpaLW217u
The officers had probably cause. Why can't the suspect comply until this is figured out. The suspect absolutely escalated this. It is unfortunate that you and other ignorant folks promote resisting and refusing officers' reasonable directions.
going4roses said:
When one is conditioned to see them as potential life ending problem(never positive never a benefit ) it's not that simple. The psychological terror is ingrained. Policing Black bodies always has racial tensions. But I get it you never have had those experiences that shaped your persona.
This is not South Africa we don't have to have papers but that's what your saying is ok
82gradDLSdad said:oski003 said:going4roses said:He locked his keys in his own car. He was trying to get it unlocked with a coathanger.
— 🥀_ Imposter_🥀 (@Imposter_Edits) September 20, 2023
Police ignored everyone on the scene and went straight to escilation. pic.twitter.com/IVpaLW217u
The officers had probably cause. Why can't the suspect comply until this is figured out. The suspect absolutely escalated this. It is unfortunate that you and other ignorant folks promote resisting and refusing officers' reasonable directions.
I don't understand why folks don't comply with police orders when they are asked for identification? Somewhere along the lines people got the idea that they don't have to obey law enforcement's requests. I was taught that if you don't you get cuffed and taken to jail. If you resist that you get thrown to the ground or tazed. Don't get it. Even the kids of color I grew up with knew this and complied. Simple.
2 veteran cops in Michigan were arrested after assaulting a 14-year-old who was handcuffed in the backseat of a police cruiser. Derek Reed was charged with child abuse. Alan Weir was charged with neglect of duty. These thugs beat up a literal child with their body cams on. pic.twitter.com/wSpKTFSL47
— Fifty Shades of Whey (@davenewworld_2) September 21, 2023
"Officers referred to this facility as the 'Brave Cave,' where the street crimes unit held people in custody, assaulted them, and conducted strip and body-cavity searches on them, the lawsuit claimed."https://t.co/ckPHr35Jin
— Fifty Shades of Whey (@davenewworld_2) September 21, 2023
going4roses said:
When one is conditioned to see them as potential life ending problem(never positive never a benefit ) it's not that simple. The psychological terror is ingrained. Policing Black bodies always caused racial tensions. But I get it you never have had those types of experiences that in turn shape ones persona.
This is not South Africa we don't have to have papers but that's what your saying is ok
going4roses said:
82 this is why your argue falls short2 veteran cops in Michigan were arrested after assaulting a 14-year-old who was handcuffed in the backseat of a police cruiser. Derek Reed was charged with child abuse. Alan Weir was charged with neglect of duty. These thugs beat up a literal child with their body cams on. pic.twitter.com/wSpKTFSL47
— Fifty Shades of Whey (@davenewworld_2) September 21, 2023
If this type of stuff never happened maybe you might have a point but since it does. It's all about survival fight or flight.
going4roses said:
Umm I don't know what to tell about those whom you grew up with, perhaps they didn't want to talk about it or maybe buried those experiences because of that pain/shame ?
going4roses said:
Umm I don't know what to tell about those whom you grew up with, perhaps they didn't want to talk about it or maybe buried those experiences because of that pain/shame ?
going4roses said:
An addendum
Unit2Sucks said:going4roses said:
An addendum
When I was in high school our car was pulled over in a lower middle class neighborhood. When the officer got to the driver he asked why we were there. He said he pulled us over because he din't know why mexicans would be driving a nicer car and assumed we were up to no good. When we said we were just grabbing lunch he said that sounded good and we were free to go. Since we all appeared white, he didn't hide the pretext behind the stop.
Another time I was with a group of friends who was out late at night in a car. Officer comes by to ask what we are doing and all 4 of us nervously talked out of turn. One of us (lwho was irish) looked Mexican and when he spoke the cop said "no one asked you anything <racial epithet>, so shut up unless I speak to you directly."
Because I'm white, these are just two inconsequential stories where I was shown behind the curtain of institutional racism. When I talk to people of color about this sort of thing, they invariably have different versions of these stories that are much more perilous and far too frequently have actual consequences.
This isn't just anecdata - there is a wealth of evidence that this is happening all over the country and has been for longer than any of us have been alive. To pretend like all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are as a result of people of color not acting white (which is essentially what a lot of the arguments boil down to) is extremely shortsighted. This is a real problem and one that shouldn't exist in America in 2023.
oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:going4roses said:
An addendum
When I was in high school our car was pulled over in a lower middle class neighborhood. When the officer got to the driver he asked why we were there. He said he pulled us over because he din't know why mexicans would be driving a nicer car and assumed we were up to no good. When we said we were just grabbing lunch he said that sounded good and we were free to go. Since we all appeared white, he didn't hide the pretext behind the stop.
Another time I was with a group of friends who was out late at night in a car. Officer comes by to ask what we are doing and all 4 of us nervously talked out of turn. One of us (lwho was irish) looked Mexican and when he spoke the cop said "no one asked you anything <racial epithet>, so shut up unless I speak to you directly."
Because I'm white, these are just two inconsequential stories where I was shown behind the curtain of institutional racism. When I talk to people of color about this sort of thing, they invariably have different versions of these stories that are much more perilous and far too frequently have actual consequences.
This isn't just anecdata - there is a wealth of evidence that this is happening all over the country and has been for longer than any of us have been alive. To pretend like all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are as a result of people of color not acting white (which is essentially what a lot of the arguments boil down to) is extremely shortsighted. This is a real problem and one that shouldn't exist in America in 2023.
Nobody is pretending that all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are a result of people not acting respectfully to officers. However, to not give an officer your name after you are seen breaking into a car is absolutely absurd. Blaming the cops for the escalated interaction is completely absurd. Excusing this poor poor behavior because racial profiling exists is completely absurd. I am also saddened that you and others equate acting respectfully to an officer as acting white and something derogatory. That is awful.
"The 50 officers employed in the sleepy town earned the city more than $1 million in fines in 2022 with over 5,100 citations. Coffee City was employing five times the number of cops cities of similar size would retain."https://t.co/gB6msL3Oxm
— Fifty Shades of Whey (@davenewworld_2) September 21, 2023
82gradDLSdad said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:going4roses said:
An addendum
When I was in high school our car was pulled over in a lower middle class neighborhood. When the officer got to the driver he asked why we were there. He said he pulled us over because he din't know why mexicans would be driving a nicer car and assumed we were up to no good. When we said we were just grabbing lunch he said that sounded good and we were free to go. Since we all appeared white, he didn't hide the pretext behind the stop.
Another time I was with a group of friends who was out late at night in a car. Officer comes by to ask what we are doing and all 4 of us nervously talked out of turn. One of us (lwho was irish) looked Mexican and when he spoke the cop said "no one asked you anything <racial epithet>, so shut up unless I speak to you directly."
Because I'm white, these are just two inconsequential stories where I was shown behind the curtain of institutional racism. When I talk to people of color about this sort of thing, they invariably have different versions of these stories that are much more perilous and far too frequently have actual consequences.
This isn't just anecdata - there is a wealth of evidence that this is happening all over the country and has been for longer than any of us have been alive. To pretend like all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are as a result of people of color not acting white (which is essentially what a lot of the arguments boil down to) is extremely shortsighted. This is a real problem and one that shouldn't exist in America in 2023.
Nobody is pretending that all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are a result of people not acting respectfully to officers. However, to not give an officer your name after you are seen breaking into a car is absolutely absurd. Blaming the cops for the escalated interaction is completely absurd. Excusing this poor poor behavior because racial profiling exists is completely absurd. I am also saddened that you and others equate acting respectfully to an officer as acting white and something derogatory. That is awful.
Exactly. I don't know how to combat racism or racial profiling but I can figure out one thing I wouldn't do: I wouldn't say I don't have to do anything you tell me to do Mr. policeman!. God, go on YouTube. It's full of stupid people of all colors, mostly drunk and/or stoned that do this and pay the price.
What does "they have guns and most of them or nice" mean? The January 6 protestors and rioters should not have ignored the cops. I don't recall anyone here arguing that they should have.AunBear89 said:82gradDLSdad said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:going4roses said:
An addendum
When I was in high school our car was pulled over in a lower middle class neighborhood. When the officer got to the driver he asked why we were there. He said he pulled us over because he din't know why mexicans would be driving a nicer car and assumed we were up to no good. When we said we were just grabbing lunch he said that sounded good and we were free to go. Since we all appeared white, he didn't hide the pretext behind the stop.
Another time I was with a group of friends who was out late at night in a car. Officer comes by to ask what we are doing and all 4 of us nervously talked out of turn. One of us (lwho was irish) looked Mexican and when he spoke the cop said "no one asked you anything <racial epithet>, so shut up unless I speak to you directly."
Because I'm white, these are just two inconsequential stories where I was shown behind the curtain of institutional racism. When I talk to people of color about this sort of thing, they invariably have different versions of these stories that are much more perilous and far too frequently have actual consequences.
This isn't just anecdata - there is a wealth of evidence that this is happening all over the country and has been for longer than any of us have been alive. To pretend like all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are as a result of people of color not acting white (which is essentially what a lot of the arguments boil down to) is extremely shortsighted. This is a real problem and one that shouldn't exist in America in 2023.
Nobody is pretending that all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are a result of people not acting respectfully to officers. However, to not give an officer your name after you are seen breaking into a car is absolutely absurd. Blaming the cops for the escalated interaction is completely absurd. Excusing this poor poor behavior because racial profiling exists is completely absurd. I am also saddened that you and others equate acting respectfully to an officer as acting white and something derogatory. That is awful.
Exactly. I don't know how to combat racism or racial profiling but I can figure out one thing I wouldn't do: I wouldn't say I don't have to do anything you tell me to do Mr. policeman!. God, go on YouTube. It's full of stupid people of all colors, mostly drunk and/or stoned that do this and pay the price.
And that makes it ok?!? They have guns and most of them or nice, so we should comply with everything they say?
Unless you are a white woman breaking in to the US Capitol - then you can ignore what the cops tell you and the cops should back away.
AunBear89 said:82gradDLSdad said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:going4roses said:
An addendum
When I was in high school our car was pulled over in a lower middle class neighborhood. When the officer got to the driver he asked why we were there. He said he pulled us over because he din't know why mexicans would be driving a nicer car and assumed we were up to no good. When we said we were just grabbing lunch he said that sounded good and we were free to go. Since we all appeared white, he didn't hide the pretext behind the stop.
Another time I was with a group of friends who was out late at night in a car. Officer comes by to ask what we are doing and all 4 of us nervously talked out of turn. One of us (lwho was irish) looked Mexican and when he spoke the cop said "no one asked you anything <racial epithet>, so shut up unless I speak to you directly."
Because I'm white, these are just two inconsequential stories where I was shown behind the curtain of institutional racism. When I talk to people of color about this sort of thing, they invariably have different versions of these stories that are much more perilous and far too frequently have actual consequences.
This isn't just anecdata - there is a wealth of evidence that this is happening all over the country and has been for longer than any of us have been alive. To pretend like all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are as a result of people of color not acting white (which is essentially what a lot of the arguments boil down to) is extremely shortsighted. This is a real problem and one that shouldn't exist in America in 2023.
Nobody is pretending that all of the issues between law enforcement and people of color in this country are a result of people not acting respectfully to officers. However, to not give an officer your name after you are seen breaking into a car is absolutely absurd. Blaming the cops for the escalated interaction is completely absurd. Excusing this poor poor behavior because racial profiling exists is completely absurd. I am also saddened that you and others equate acting respectfully to an officer as acting white and something derogatory. That is awful.
Exactly. I don't know how to combat racism or racial profiling but I can figure out one thing I wouldn't do: I wouldn't say I don't have to do anything you tell me to do Mr. policeman!. God, go on YouTube. It's full of stupid people of all colors, mostly drunk and/or stoned that do this and pay the price.
And that makes it ok?!? They have guns and most of them or nice, so we should comply with everything they say?
Unless you are a white woman breaking in to the US Capitol - then you can ignore what the cops tell you and the cops should back away.
Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Arrested for Illegally Committing Ex to Psych Ward https://t.co/V4OvVz7RtU
— TMZ (@TMZ) September 25, 2023
Lawsuits filed in federal court said Baton Rouge police detained, abused and humiliated detainees in an unmarked “torture warehouse.” The FBI has opened a civil rights investigation into the allegations. https://t.co/yoJQLX2l6W
— The New York Times (@nytimes) September 25, 2023
A Mississippi sheriff used the power of a grand jury at least 8 times over a year to spy on his married girlfriend and the school employee with whom she was also “unfaithful”
— philip lewis (@Phil_Lewis_) September 27, 2023
The attorney general, two judges and a future congressman all kept his secret https://t.co/VSjLFbytYV
Opinion: I spent 22 years in prison for a crime that never happened. That's not even the worst part (via @latimesopinion ) https://t.co/e1qZqjGKuW
— L.A. Times Opinion (@latimesopinion) September 27, 2023
Unbelievable! A Philidelphia judge has dropped the charges against Officer Mark Dial.
— 🥀_ Imposter_🥀 (@Imposter_Edits) September 27, 2023
Dial was the cop who lied, he had claimed Eddie Jose Irizarry had jumped out of his car and charged at him with a weapon when security footage turned up it showed the cop shot the man who was… pic.twitter.com/MQdqLkdFLe
going4roses said:Unbelievable! A Philidelphia judge has dropped the charges against Officer Mark Dial.
— 🥀_ Imposter_🥀 (@Imposter_Edits) September 27, 2023
Dial was the cop who lied, he had claimed Eddie Jose Irizarry had jumped out of his car and charged at him with a weapon when security footage turned up it showed the cop shot the man who was… pic.twitter.com/MQdqLkdFLe
New from 404 Media: those food delivery robots that are armed with cameras and driving all over sidewalks in LA? They're providing filmed footage to the LAPD, according to internal emails we got. Food delivery robots just became surveillance devices https://t.co/kAxh1tSgZ0
— Joseph Cox (@josephfcox) September 28, 2023
BREAKING UPDATE: Charges have been refiled against Mark Dial, the former Philadelphia police officer seen on video shooting Eddie Irizarry last month, just hours after a judge threw out the case Tuesday. https://t.co/Eh5h7rWYub
— CBS Philadelphia (@CBSPhiladelphia) September 26, 2023
okaydo said:New from 404 Media: those food delivery robots that are armed with cameras and driving all over sidewalks in LA? They're providing filmed footage to the LAPD, according to internal emails we got. Food delivery robots just became surveillance devices https://t.co/kAxh1tSgZ0
— Joseph Cox (@josephfcox) September 28, 2023
okaydo said:BREAKING UPDATE: Charges have been refiled against Mark Dial, the former Philadelphia police officer seen on video shooting Eddie Irizarry last month, just hours after a judge threw out the case Tuesday. https://t.co/Eh5h7rWYub
— CBS Philadelphia (@CBSPhiladelphia) September 26, 2023
This is the only post Okaydo has made about this case.oski003 said:okaydo said:BREAKING UPDATE: Charges have been refiled against Mark Dial, the former Philadelphia police officer seen on video shooting Eddie Irizarry last month, just hours after a judge threw out the case Tuesday. https://t.co/Eh5h7rWYub
— CBS Philadelphia (@CBSPhiladelphia) September 26, 2023
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