F*CK THE POLICE!!!

spandy

Well-Known Member
I pay their salary, and it's kinda their job, whether I like them or not.
Its their job to enforce law. They can like you as much as you like them, and I'm sure you are the type to let it be known how much you like you some police.

What is your moms degree in? Mom stayed at the home, did the farmers wife thing and has never collected a single pay roll check her entire life.
 

elkamino

Well-Known Member
A New Report Shows How Often Cops Sexually Assault Civilians http://www.vice.com/read/a-new-report-shows-how-bad-cops-coerce-sex-in-america-1102


A New Report Shows How Often Cops Sexually Assault Civilians
November 2, 2015
by Brian McManus

By now, most Americans know the country has a glaring problem with police brutality and excessive force, especially against people of color. Virtually every week, a new video emerges of an unarmed black person being roughed up by cops under questionable circumstances. And one of the worst things about this dire state of affairs is that, at least until a few news organizations began trying to track police killings recently, we have no comprehensive database of the tragedies.

If that weren't enough, the United States is also plagued by an even less visible scourge of cops abusing their power to coerce sex from vulnerable citizens, according to a year-long Associated Press investigation released this week.

At an annual gathering of police chiefs in 2007, nearly all of the 70 department heads present raised their hands when asked if they'd had to deal with sexual misconduct. A task force was formed to look into the problem, but it doesn't seem to have stamped out sex assault by any means: The AP pulled records from 41 states from 2009 to 2014 and was able to see just how rampant sexual misconduct is in departments across the country.

The picture the news organization paints is not a pretty one.

The AP focused on officers who'd faced decertification—"an administrative process in which an officer's law enforcement license is revoked"—for sexual misconduct. The findings suggest a problem that spans the country; 1,000 officers were stripped of their badges in that time due to sexual misconduct, which encompasses a whole host of wrongdoing like sexual contact without consent, sodomy, child molestation, incest, fondling, rape or attempted rape, and sexting juveniles, among other perverted—and often illegal—acts.

More sobering still is that these numbers don't represent all cases: Nine states and the District of Columbia either don't decertify officers or wouldn't turn over info to the AP.

"It's happening probably in every law enforcement agency across the country," Chief Bernadette DiPino of the Sarasota Police Department in Florida told the AP. She helped study the problem for the International Association of Chiefs of Police. "It's so underreported and people are scared that if they call and complain about a police officer, they think every other police officer is going to be then out to get them."

One of the worst cases detailed by the AP centers on an officer named Sergio Alvarez of West Sacramento, who allegedly abused his power over a period of years, raping his victims or forcing them to perform oral sex on him in a darkened alleyway behind a strip mall. His victims were marginalized and voiceless: addicts, prostitutes, and the mentally ill. He's currently in prison, but the report suggests there are likely plenty others like him who have avoided any accountability.

Former officer Daniel Holtzclaw in Oklahoma City is another repeat offender, according to the report. He is accused by 13 women of sexual assault ranging from forced oral sex to rape, and faces them all in a court case that began Monday. Among his accusers is a woman named in police reports as "J.L.," who describes a routine traffic stop that ended in forced oral sex and the fear that Holtzclaw was going to kill her. "Come on," he allegedly told her after forcing her into the back seat of his car and exposing himself. "I don't have all night."

In a report issued by the Department of Justice in March that blasted the San Diego Police Department for its failures, the feds seemed to get at practical steps that might help reduce future wrongdoing. That department's officers lacked proper supervision, a result of recent budget cuts and staffing problems. After said cuts, nearly a quarter of sergeant positions had been filled with officers who "lacked the training and authority of their predecessors," the AP wrote.

At times, sergeants didn't work the same shifts as the officers they supervised or saw their subordinates infrequently, "creating an environment more vulnerable to undetected misconduct," the report said.

San Diego saw the hiring of a new police chief, Shelley Zimmerman, in March 2014. She's committed to turning the department around, and is now requiring patrol officers to wear body cameras. Overall complaints have dropped 23 percent in three divisions where officers began wearing the cameras in July 2014, she told the AP.

Tom McDonald, the new chief in West Sacramento who came on board after the Alvarez case, is taking his own steps to help weed out officers he calls "bad actors" within his force. He's mandated that all cars have functional GPS systems, for one, and made sergeants in his department directly responsible for the supervision of police on the street, mandating they show up to help with arrests, among other sensible steps.

Perhaps the most depressing thing about all of this is that it seems like often, the only way cops are brought to justice is when fellow officers police them. Victims reportedly fear a good ole boy network—often called the blue shield or blue wall of silence—that operates in the most corrupt departments. The blue shield is usually discussed in the context of traditional police brutality, where officers don't report misconduct when they see it, but it's hard to imagine the same kind of shady shit isn't going on when it comes to sexual assault.

Still, it was a colleague of Alvarez's, patrol officer Jason Mahaffey, who brought him down, reporting an allegation of misconduct against the cop to his superiors. Alvarez, who is appealing his sentence, is set to serve 205 years to life in prison. The West Sacramento Police Department has paid out $4.1 million in public funds to six of his victims.

Bleak as it sounds, cops refusing to turn a blind eye is the surest way to get this disaster under control. "They need to understand that it's an expectation that if they see something that's inappropriate, they need to stand up," McDonald said.

Follow Brian McManus on Twitter.
 

green217

Well-Known Member
Police brutality crosses all ethnic/racial lines. They treat everyone the suspect could be guilty like they are criminals. Once they have you incarcerated, they for sure treat you subhuman. I have lived it, as have many others. Our country arrests more of it's citizens than any other country in the world. Home of the Free? Green is the leader of our country, and only a few people control it. All this 99% is really disturbing when you actually realize how we are being duped. We continue to bog ourselves down fighting with each other. What happened to that girl is wrong, and police have gotten away with it for a long time. We all can agree to that, I hope. It was a ridiculous amount of force to put on a female high school student sitting at her desk. We have a long way to go in equality in the US. Unfortunately this is not going to be fixed in our generation, all we can do is gain as much ground as we can. There are to many bigots out there, spreading their fucked up way of thinking to kids and other impressionable people to abolish it all together. I see each generation making gains, but the human race has a lot of dumb ass traits to weed out before we can actually coexist peacefully.
Sorry for the rant, stoned. But this thread did expose a lot of what is wrong with our society now. Hard headed people who are stuck in same way of thinking because they learned it, from another ignorant SOB.
 

abandonconflict

Well-Known Member
You must not have read any of this thread..... Your friends think you and anybody else that blame this kid in any way are racist cop dick suckers.... Because she's black and black people shouldn't have to obey the police because police are racist....
You must not have read any of this thread. You got called racist because of your blatantly racist comments.

Do you like choking on cop dick or are you just a cop?
 

woody333333

Well-Known Member
You must not have read any of this thread. You got called racist because of your blatantly racist comments.

Do you like choking on cop dick or are you just a cop?
My blatantly racist comments about how I think she should have cooperated w the police to avoid getting her ass kicked...
 

abandonconflict

Well-Known Member
My blatantly racist comments about how I think she should have cooperated w the police to avoid getting her ass kicked...
No, the ones about how you're completely ignorant yet outspoken regarding race. Like when you went on and on about how all black people are terrible parents, or when you said that people hate white people but refused to elaborate, or when you called George Zimmerman a Mexican and flippantly dismissed the correction as if all hispanics are the same, even though he's a natural US citizen, or when you said white people are racist.

Nobody called you racist for defending the steroid addled police officer, just a cop dick sucker.
 

woody333333

Well-Known Member
No, the ones about how you're completely ignorant yet outspoken regarding race. Like when you went on and on about how all black people are terrible parents, or when you said that people hate white people but refused to elaborate, or when you called George Zimmerman a Mexican and flippantly dismissed the correction as if all hispanics are the same, even though he's a natural US citizen, or when you said white people are racist.

Nobody called you racist for defending the steroid addled police officer, just a cop dick sucker.
So you got nothing.... Bunch a bullshit you take out of context to prove I'm racist.... Cute little traps that fail.... Youre pathetic
 

abandonconflict

Well-Known Member
Is it more or less factual than the statistic that black people commit far more crime per capita?
SES explains this, not some racial theory. Why are you trying to push a racial theory that was thoroughly debunked and is a totally racist racial theory? Don't go saying that people are being called racist for no reason. Nobody is calling you a cop dick sucker either you tard.

The fact is, socioeconomic stratification is still close to parallel with ethnic lines. POOR people commit more crimes. Why are you trying to push the ABSOLUTELY racist notion that melanin causes crime?
 

bearkat42

Well-Known Member
Is it more or less factual than the statistic that black people commit far more crime per capita?

You love being backed into corners, you're a bit of a dummy.
Which has absolutely nothing to do with the discussion here. Thanks for playing though, we have some nice parting gifts for you on the way out.
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
SES explains this, not some racial theory. Why are you trying to push a racial theory that was thoroughly debunked and is a totally racist racial theory? Don't go saying that people are being called racist for no reason. Nobody is calling you a cop dick sucker either you tard.

The fact is, socioeconomic stratification is still close to parallel with ethnic lines. POOR people commit more crimes. Why are you trying to push the ABSOLUTELY racist notion that melanin causes crime?
I know all that, but I was pointing out how easy it is to use blind statistics to make potentially bigoted judgements...

Like the fact alot of the people here automatically assume white people are racist and "the problem" purely on the basis that they're white. That's as ridiculous as saying all black people commit crime.

And no, I don't think cops should brutalise black people...or white, yellow, pink, brown or otherwise people.
 

ZaraBeth420

Well-Known Member
A New Report Shows How Often Cops Sexually Assault Civilians http://www.vice.com/read/a-new-report-shows-how-bad-cops-coerce-sex-in-america-1102


A New Report Shows How Often Cops Sexually Assault Civilians
November 2, 2015
by Brian McManus

By now, most Americans know the country has a glaring problem with police brutality and excessive force, especially against people of color. Virtually every week, a new video emerges of an unarmed black person being roughed up by cops under questionable circumstances. And one of the worst things about this dire state of affairs is that, at least until a few news organizations began trying to track police killings recently, we have no comprehensive database of the tragedies.

If that weren't enough, the United States is also plagued by an even less visible scourge of cops abusing their power to coerce sex from vulnerable citizens, according to a year-long Associated Press investigation released this week.

At an annual gathering of police chiefs in 2007, nearly all of the 70 department heads present raised their hands when asked if they'd had to deal with sexual misconduct. A task force was formed to look into the problem, but it doesn't seem to have stamped out sex assault by any means: The AP pulled records from 41 states from 2009 to 2014 and was able to see just how rampant sexual misconduct is in departments across the country.

The picture the news organization paints is not a pretty one.

The AP focused on officers who'd faced decertification—"an administrative process in which an officer's law enforcement license is revoked"—for sexual misconduct. The findings suggest a problem that spans the country; 1,000 officers were stripped of their badges in that time due to sexual misconduct, which encompasses a whole host of wrongdoing like sexual contact without consent, sodomy, child molestation, incest, fondling, rape or attempted rape, and sexting juveniles, among other perverted—and often illegal—acts.

More sobering still is that these numbers don't represent all cases: Nine states and the District of Columbia either don't decertify officers or wouldn't turn over info to the AP.

"It's happening probably in every law enforcement agency across the country," Chief Bernadette DiPino of the Sarasota Police Department in Florida told the AP. She helped study the problem for the International Association of Chiefs of Police. "It's so underreported and people are scared that if they call and complain about a police officer, they think every other police officer is going to be then out to get them."

One of the worst cases detailed by the AP centers on an officer named Sergio Alvarez of West Sacramento, who allegedly abused his power over a period of years, raping his victims or forcing them to perform oral sex on him in a darkened alleyway behind a strip mall. His victims were marginalized and voiceless: addicts, prostitutes, and the mentally ill. He's currently in prison, but the report suggests there are likely plenty others like him who have avoided any accountability.

Former officer Daniel Holtzclaw in Oklahoma City is another repeat offender, according to the report. He is accused by 13 women of sexual assault ranging from forced oral sex to rape, and faces them all in a court case that began Monday. Among his accusers is a woman named in police reports as "J.L.," who describes a routine traffic stop that ended in forced oral sex and the fear that Holtzclaw was going to kill her. "Come on," he allegedly told her after forcing her into the back seat of his car and exposing himself. "I don't have all night."

In a report issued by the Department of Justice in March that blasted the San Diego Police Department for its failures, the feds seemed to get at practical steps that might help reduce future wrongdoing. That department's officers lacked proper supervision, a result of recent budget cuts and staffing problems. After said cuts, nearly a quarter of sergeant positions had been filled with officers who "lacked the training and authority of their predecessors," the AP wrote.

At times, sergeants didn't work the same shifts as the officers they supervised or saw their subordinates infrequently, "creating an environment more vulnerable to undetected misconduct," the report said.

San Diego saw the hiring of a new police chief, Shelley Zimmerman, in March 2014. She's committed to turning the department around, and is now requiring patrol officers to wear body cameras. Overall complaints have dropped 23 percent in three divisions where officers began wearing the cameras in July 2014, she told the AP.

Tom McDonald, the new chief in West Sacramento who came on board after the Alvarez case, is taking his own steps to help weed out officers he calls "bad actors" within his force. He's mandated that all cars have functional GPS systems, for one, and made sergeants in his department directly responsible for the supervision of police on the street, mandating they show up to help with arrests, among other sensible steps.

Perhaps the most depressing thing about all of this is that it seems like often, the only way cops are brought to justice is when fellow officers police them. Victims reportedly fear a good ole boy network—often called the blue shield or blue wall of silence—that operates in the most corrupt departments. The blue shield is usually discussed in the context of traditional police brutality, where officers don't report misconduct when they see it, but it's hard to imagine the same kind of shady shit isn't going on when it comes to sexual assault.

Still, it was a colleague of Alvarez's, patrol officer Jason Mahaffey, who brought him down, reporting an allegation of misconduct against the cop to his superiors. Alvarez, who is appealing his sentence, is set to serve 205 years to life in prison. The West Sacramento Police Department has paid out $4.1 million in public funds to six of his victims.

Bleak as it sounds, cops refusing to turn a blind eye is the surest way to get this disaster under control. "They need to understand that it's an expectation that if they see something that's inappropriate, they need to stand up," McDonald said.

Follow Brian McManus on Twitter.
I was sexually assaulted by a cop when I was 22 and in grad school. It's been hard to talk about, and I eventually sought help from a professional therapist (and that helped a lot). The cop stopped me for speeding (31mph in a 25mph zone), then said he smelled pot in my car. Bullshit. I never smoked in my car, and I hadn't smoked at all that night for it to be on my clothes. He searched me, very thoroughly. I was just coming from yoga class, and still had my yoga clothes on. And he felt every bulge, curve, and crevice on my body. I won't get any more explicit than that. Let me just say it was obvious molestation.

I've hated fucking cops ever since.
 
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