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Land of Impunity
Townhall.com ^ | October 5, 2014 | Paul Jacob

Posted on 10/05/2014 7:53:58 AM PDT by Kaslin

It is now clear that the police, without provocation, can beat an unarmed young student senseless — with impunity. They can blatantly lie about it — with impunity. They can stonewall and cover it up for months — with impunity. They can express no remorse and offer no apology — with impunity.”

About what third-world dictatorship or more up-and-coming authoritarian regime did a Washington Post editorial last week declare the above?

One of many stories of oppression in Egypt? Or Russia? Or China? Or so many other locales about which we might have missed a report in the tidal wave of media coverage of such tyrannies?

No. The Post is opining on nearby Prince George’s County, Maryland, where a college student was savagely beaten by police. After the attack on the innocent young man, police “filed no report and then falsely claimed that he instigated the incident and attacked them.” Were it not for a video of the incident surfacing, they may have gotten away with it.

Wait a second — they did get away with it!

Sure, two officers were eventually charged with assault and one convicted by a jury. But Prince George’s County Circuit Court Judge Beverly Woodard tossed aside that verdict. And closed the case.

Her reasoning? “The judge offered no explanation for her actions,” reports The Post.

But there is an explanation for her unprofessionalism. “Judge Woodard . . . failed to disclose an apparent conflict of interest — she had been previously married to a Prince George’s officer who himself was convicted for brutality — until asked about it by a journalist. In court, she exhibited what many observers regarded as overt hostility toward Mr. McKenna, the victim.”

This is hardly an isolated incident. The ABC television affiliate in Washington, D.C., has filed a civil rights lawsuit against county police for harassing and intimidating a news crew investigating police brutality.

It’s a county that six years ago spurred me to tell my Common Sense e-letter readers, in a commentary called “Scared of Maryland,” that I’m concerned about traveling through Prince George’s County.

In 2008, county police had barged into the Berwyn Heights mayor’s home and shot his two dogs dead as part of an illegal home invasion — lacking a no-knock search warrant or any probable cause.

If that’s the treatment top elected officials receive, consider what your average Joe can expect.

Weeks prior to that, a man arrested for the alleged homicide of a policeman was murdered in the county’s jail. Police working at the facility refused to cooperate in the investigation (much as police actively thwarted the investigation in the more recent and senseless beating of the student). The 2008 investigation uncovered the fact that many guards at the jail had criminal records and had committed crimes while on duty at the jail.

That same year, the winner in a Washington Post contest to pick a new slogan for the state, was: “Maryland — wait, we can explain.”

But how exactly do you explain a police state?

I’ve argued that police should be required to wear cameras on the job — for the sake of both the wrongly used and the wrongly accused. But ensuring that video is recorded and then, if necessary, used in tandem with other relevant evidence to secure justice doesn’t happen automatically. It requires a culture dedicated to upholding ethical standards of professional conduct.

That culture doesn’t exist in Prince George’s County, Maryland.

Instead, the only justice for the victims comes by way of an injustice against taxpayers. The county has already agreed to pay this abused college student $2 million to settle a lawsuit.

Prince George’s County voters will find on their ballot this November a measure referred there unanimously by their county council. Does it provide greater police accountability? Punish police misconduct? Protect citizens and police by putting cameras on working cops?

No, the measure will weaken voter-enacted term limits so that county politicians can stay in their offices longer.

It’s easy to now see that my fear of Maryland was justified.

But let’s not miss the most depressing fact of all: Maryland is hardly unique. All over America, in state after state, city after city, we see police armed as warriors, breaking the law, violating our rights, and, as a result, becoming destructive to and disconnected from the people they are supposed to serve.

Meanwhile, our elected officials dare little (and do next to nothing) to fix this problem (or any problem).

Police work for us, the citizens. The same is true of city councils, mayors, governors, legislators, presidents — and yet they are not ensuring that the police work, in fact, to protect our rights.

It’s up to us, the concerned citizens — through protest and petitions to reform the laws — who must change this dangerous dynamic.


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: police

1 posted on 10/05/2014 7:53:58 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Rise of the Warrior Cop is an excellent and well documented history of how America has degenerated toward a police state. It must be stopped. The numbers are staggering.
2 posted on 10/05/2014 8:21:17 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (Democrats: the Party of slavery to the immensely wealthy for over 200 years.)
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To: Kaslin

No more Peacekeepers.


3 posted on 10/05/2014 9:02:39 AM PDT by Iron Munro (We can make it work with only one square per restroom visit -- Sheryl Crow)
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To: Kaslin

Maryland just hasn’t been the same since Abe Lincoln threw the state legislature in “detention” at the beginning of the Civil War.


4 posted on 10/05/2014 9:33:58 AM PDT by Prospero (Si Deus trucido mihi, ego etiam fides Deus.)
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To: Kaslin
As a former LEO, I denounce anyone that carries a badge and dishonors what it stands for. And for those that break the laws while doing so, they should have the book thrown at them twice.

At the end of the article, Mr Jacob does paint with a broad brush though. The Law Enforcement in the area where I live, is highly regarded and very professional.

I don't understand his line about them being 'armed as warriors'. Is this another dig at the militarization of the Police?
If so than Depts should stop hiring Vets and fire everyone on the force that has ever served in the Military. Than we need all the criminals to turn in their assault weapons (yes I know). That way there will be no more SLA's, North Hollywood Bank's, DC Snipers, etc.....Plus the Police will be able to get rid of their Armor Cars/MRAPs/Tanks/Death Machines.

The next thing to go would be those scary Bullet Proof Vest. You know the ones that are "BLACK", or "CAMO", or "DESERT" in color. I mean, why can't they be 'white' and thin as a t-shirt and worn under your uniform shirt like I use too? It's not like MS-13 has AKs or bullets have been better designed in 25 years.

Sorry for the rant. Back to the asshole cops that should be put into jail for beating up some guy. No I would not protect them if I was still working. I never lied for no one. Especially a bad cop.

Ed

5 posted on 10/05/2014 11:04:42 AM PDT by husky ed (FOX NEWS ALERT "Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still dead" THIS HAS BEEN A FOX NEWS ALERT)
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