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Awesome?
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So:
1) The cops tased an unarmed Stanley Harlan to death. J.J. Baird shot him at least 3 times – 21 seconds, 7 seconds, 3 seconds. 21s is a LONG TIME to be tased.
2) Officers Gary Breyfogle and Jared Dotson both initially said he was violent and they had to subdue him. Then later, they said he was never violent in a deposition.
3) Both officers admitted to DESTROYING RECORDS on the incident before turning in official report.
4) They had defibulators in case something like this happened, but they didn't bother to take them in the police car. Tax$ paid for them, but they coudn't be used.
5) County coroner Gerald Luntsford ruled it a homicide and requested an inquest–but guess what? It never happened. Special prosecutor Mason Gebhardt says he the coroner agreed no inquest was necessary. SO WHY ISNT' THE CORONER SAYING THAT? It seems like Gebhardt is lying to me.
6) That same special prosecutor decided not to pursue criminal charges. Fancy that.
Here's hoping they all go down.
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Why did the police even come? They called 911 and thought paramedics would come. They stupidly thought their son should go to the hospital because he got too stoned and was acting paranoid. Mistake 1. Then they called 911. Mistake 2.
Then the cops cam and shot him up with pepper pellets 40 times, and hit his mom in the head with a metal flashlight so hard her head had to be stapled, because she thought they were shooting him with bullets, so she tried to take a bullet for him.
Yea. Lawsuit rightfully ensued. $300,000 of taxpayer money wasted because 911 sends thugs instead of ambulances.
This is all because someone smoked a flower and had stupid parents who thought it was safe to call 911!
Deputies Missel, A. Sevilla, and Jon Auer need to get a clue. They should become rent-a-cops instead of real cops.
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Yeah, he was fired. But he was arrested too. For driving drunk. He did the crime. Did he serve the time? No. The Thin Blue Line protected him. "He already lost his job, that's bad enough." So the arresting cop doesn't even show up at a court.
He gets away with no convictions and our tax dollars paid for all of it: His car that he crashed, his job, the job of the person arresting him, the judge — all for nothing.
To the state trooper who let Officers Irving "Rocky" Simmons get away with it: Maybe one of your kids will be hit by a drunk driver? That would be some unfortunate karma, but you probably have it coming. If you don't protect the public, you deserve to not have protection yourself.
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The article brings up some points I hadn't thought of. The RIAA/recording industries methods are akin to inserting a camera into every car to make sure you're not using your car for illegal purposes. It's an attempt to take away our most basic rights of privacy. And they want us to pay for this out of our taxes.
They also make a good point about the pirate bay case — it is NOT the artists who were suing them, nor is it the pirates who were being sued. It was industry suing people for running a filesharing site. File sharing is not illegal any more than calling someone on the phone is illegal!
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Well here's one with ***15*** options instead of 3 or 5. WHOA. Good luck remembering all of this….
April 30, 2009
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May 1, 2009 at 8:56 AM
Officers are supposed to show up for their court cases, and usually do. I’m pretty sure they can be disciplined for not showing up, it’s policy. The fact that they aren’t disciplined is also part of the thin blue line.