If you speak up they’ll say you’re resisting arrest. The only thing to do is act like an wimpy sheep.
baaafreakinbaaa.
police are seen attempting to revive Yancy while a witness states, All of this for one guy who wasnt even resisting arrest,. The officer is said to have received no serious injuries.
They f'd him up so badly they won't let his family see the body!
LEO’s need to learn some fear before this will stop. A few of them need to fail to go home after their shift.
They need to be drug tested. Especially for ‘roids.
But the cops made it home without breaking a nail. That’s all that matters, right?
Due process, along with most of the rest of the Constitution, is out the window in Øbama’s America.
Here is an old one from Houston that always stuck in my craw, I remember “the hole”, it is where cops went to sleep in their cars and hang out, to avoid patrol.
“”Joe Campos Torres (December 20, 1953 - May 5, 1977) was a 23-year-old Vietnam Veteran who was beaten by several Houston police officers and subsequently died.
Torres had been arrested at a Houston bar for disorderly conduct. Six police officers took Torres to a spot called The Hole next to Buffalo Bayou and beat him.
The officers then took Torres to the city jail, who refused to process him due to his injuries. They were ordered to take him to Ben Taub General Hospital, but instead of doing so, the officers brought him back to the banks of Buffalo Bayou and pushed him into the water. Torress body was found two days later.””
Another Torres family loss: “”The Torres family grappled with tragedy again when Army Sgt. Jacob Molina was killed in a roadside bombing in Afghanistan on Tuesday. The 27-year-old soldier was the nephew of Joe Campos Torres, who died in one of the most notorious cases of police brutality in Houston’s history.
“No family deserves to go through what we’ve been through,” Sandra Torres said.
Molina never met his uncle, but he grew up hearing stories about him, and looking at pictures of him in uniform. His decision to join the Army was motivated in part by his uncle’s service, relatives say.
Joe Campos Torres was wearing his Army fatigues and combat boots when Houston police arrested him after a disturbance at an East End bar in May 1977.
He drowned after being severely beaten by officers and thrown into Buffalo Bayou. His body was found floating in the water a few days later.
The officers were convicted of negligent homicide and received probation of one year in state court. Federal charges resulted in prison sentences of a year and a day for civil rights violations, and a decade of probation for conspiracy.””
This is tragic.
posting the names and addresses of these cops would make others think twice
What's it "Comply or get beat to death by the cops?"
FFS, let the revolution begin already.
He must have resisted arrest so they had no choice but to beat him to death.
Around here, they used to at least take them back to the jail where there was a stairway to fall down.
Who has the authority to prevent them?
unbelievable...they are asking for war.
Well, at least no dogs died and the police went home safely to their families. What else can you ask for? A disturbed citizen dead without due process of law. No matter. We have to show these peasants who is in charge. Complain about this and we’ll come and get you. To protect and to serve (our Nazi government)
i believe some are hoping vets go after cops after the cops push them too far to give a pretext to martial law/cwii. admin fears armed vets and armed citizens who shoot far better than the average cop does.
I’ve been really torn in the past few years about my feelings toward law enforcement. My uncle was a police officer who was killed in the line of duty in 1974. He rolled up on a burglary in progress and as soon as he got out his patrol car the perpetual started shooting at him. Though wounded, he managed to shoot the guy in the leg, but since my uncle only had his service revolver on him, once he fired his 6 rounds, he was toast. The person went to the squad car, got out the shotgun inside, and murdered my uncle. The guy is still in prison to this day. He was 17, so he wasted two lives that day.
Because of this family history, I planned on becoming a police officer when I graduated college. I even got my degree in Criminal Justice, which is fairly worthless if you aren’t going to be a police officer. I ended up becoming a school teacher, mostly because I felt that it would be more rewarding to help instill values into troubled kids before they had to deal with the police....I work in an inner city school, the police have never been real popular with the kids.
I guess I have rambled on enough, but I didn’t want to come off as a life long anti-law enforcement Internet tough guy. I read......alot, and I seem to be seeing more and more examples of police over reach, and blatant disregard for the people they are supposed to be protecting and serving. I myself have never had a negative interaction with the police, and even though my uncle was killed 40 years ago there are still many in my community who remember the incident.
I’m not really sure what the reason is for the police to seemingly be becoming more militarily based, but something has got to give.
(Please forgive any typos, I’m typing on my cell phone.)
Yet many freedom loving conservatives are always welcoming new primary stop opportunities for LEO. Just say safety and the idiotocracy will bend over and drop trow. Then thank the officer for going in easy. Makes me physically ill.
i can only wonder why this didnt provoke a (shall we say) discourteous response