Three White, So-Called "Student Resource Officers" Pounce on 4-foot-10, 100 pound Latino teen to take away her cell phone at Houston HS

From [HERE] A high school student in Houston, Texas, is accusing resource officers of using excessive force to detain her after she refused to give up her cell phone to a school administrator Tuesday.

Ixel Perez, a 15-year-old girl, says three officers at Sam Houston Math, Science and Technology Center tackled and handcuffed her in order to take the phone away. One officer used his knee to press down on her head as she screamed in pain, she said. An onlooking student recorded video of the incident, which was later posted on Instagram and shared widely on other social networks.

Sheleah Reed, a spokesperson for the Houston Independent School District, told BuzzFeed administrators and the school district’s police department are investigating the incident “to find out exactly what led to the student’s detainment.” She said student safety was a top priority for all schools in the district, but did not provide any further details pending the investigation.

Some of the school’s students and parents organized a rally Wednesday to denounce the officers’ actions and posted pictures on social media using the hashtag #Freesamhouston.

At the rally, Perez told local reporters her reading teacher caught her checking her phone, against school policy, and kicked her out of class. Perez said she refused to give up her phone to the school’s assistant principal because her stepfather had texted to say he couldn’t locate her mother, who has kidney problems and received dialysis.

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Same White OK City Cop Accused of Sexually Assaulting Black Women also Sued for Hogtying Black Man, Forcing him into squad car & Killing him

From [HERE] Racist Suspect Daniel Holtzclaw, the 27-year-old Oklahoma City police officer charged with sexually assaulting eight black women, is also a defendant in a wrongful death suit filed earlier this year.

According to court documents, on the evening of May 1, 2013, Clifton Armstrong, a 39-year-old black man who suffered from paranoia and schizophrenia, called 911 for medical assistance. Holtzclaw, along with three fellow officers, arrived to his home. When given the option, Armstrong declined to enter a squad car in order to be taken to the hospital because he only wanted to travel in his grandmother's vehicle. The officers then proceeded to hogtie Armstrong into submission using belts. He was declared dead shortly afterward, as alleged in a lawsuit filed by Armstrong's mother, Velencia Maiden:

Upon information and belief, in attempting to subdue Mr Armstrong, the officers used force to restrain and subdue him, by placing him in handcuffs, and using belts to restrain his leg movement, which is famously referred to as the "maximum restraint hobble system" with malicious intent and without justification, pursuant to Oklahoma City Police Department's policy, practice or custom, I reckless disregard for the welfare of Clifton Armstrong.

As a result of this altercation, Mr Armstrong collapsed, and paramedics where summoned who transported Mr Armstrong to the emergency room at the Baptist Hospital where Armstrong was pronounced dead.

Court documents indicate that the police department opened an internal investigation into the incident and exonerated all four officers involved: Jeffery Dutton, Gregory Franklin, Mohammed Tabaia and Daniel Holtzclaw. 

Oklahoma's medical examiner ruled Armstrong's death an accident, citing "excited delirium syndrome." Many medical practitioners don't recognize excited delirium syndrome as a legitimate medical condition--and civil rights groups point to the fact it is often used to justify excessive force. Armstrong was also under the influence of methamphetamines at the time of his death. The medical examiner's report did add that his physical altercation with the police was an aggravating factor that caused his death.

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Judge Delays Release of Report on Fatal Shooting of Unarmed Black College Student by White Pasadena Cops - Shot then handcuffed

From [HERE] and [HERE] The release of a report on how Pasadena police investigated the 2012 fatal shooting of an unarmed Black teen by two white cops has been delayed after a white judge granted the officers’ association a temporary restraining order. The association, the city and any interested parties have until Sept. 23 to file arguments for or against releasing the independent report, according to Pasadena city officials.

The Pasadena Police Officers Association and white Officers Matthew Griffin and Jeffrey Newlen sued the city and its top officials and Superior Court Judge James Chalfant agreed to seal the report.

The police officers’ association claimed that the report revealed personnel records on the two officers who shot Kendrec McDade, 19, in March 2012.

"This is the perfect example of a document that should be sealed," Chalfant said, according to the Pasadena Star News. "I intend to grant the order to seal." The Star News and the Pasadena Press Weekly requested a copy of the report, by the Office of Independent Review Group, headed by Michael Gennaco.

Officers Mathew Griffin and Jeff Newlen, who were responding to a 911 call for a laptop stolen at gunpoint, chased McDade into a dark street in Northwest Pasadena and shot him dead allegedly when his hand was at his waistband, believing he was armed, police said. Investigators later discovered he was not armed and the 911 caller had lied about seeing weapons in order to get a quicker police response. McDade only had a cell phone in his pocket.

McDade also does not fit the profile of the kind of person who would normally commit armed robbery. He has no gang ties or prior arrests, was a star football player in high school, and was a student at Citrus College at the time of his death. [MORE

McDade was shot at point-blank range by one Pasadena police officer and then after being struck by a total of seven bullets he was handcuffed as he layed in the street dying, according to the Los Angeles County coroner's office autopsy report. The federal lawsuit also alleges McDade was left on the street for a prolonged period of time without receiving first aid

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In hundreds of police departments across the country, the percentage of whites on the force is more than 30 percentage points higher than in the communities they serve

From [HERE] In hundreds of police departments across the country, the percentage of whites on the force is more than 30 percentage points higher than in the communities they serve, according to an analysis of a government survey of police departments. Minorities make up a quarter of police forces, according to the 2007 survey, the most recent comprehensive data available. Experts say that diversity in the police force increases a department’s credibility with its community. “Even if police officers of whatever race enforce the law in relatively the same way, there is a huge image problem with a department that is so out of sync with the racial composition of the local population,” said Ronald Weitzer, a sociologist at George Washington University. Listed below are local police departments from 15 metropolitan areas, sorted so that departments with the largest percentage-point differences of white officers to white residents are at the top. [MORE

White Baton Rouge Cop Text Message: "I wish someone would pull a Ferguson on them and take them out. I hate looking at those African monkeys at work...I enjoy arresting those thugs with their saggy pants."

"Most white people hate Black people. The reason that most white people hate Black people is because whites are not Black people. If you know this about white people, you need know little else. If you do not know this about white people, virtually all else that you know about them will only confuse you." -Neely Fuller.  

From [HERE] and [HERE] A white Baton Rouge police officer resigned Thursday after he allegedly sent racially-charged text messages to another person, Baton Rouge Police Cpl. Don Coppola confirmed Thursday. Michael Elsbury reportedly submitted his letter of resignation Thursday afternoon. The officer works out of the Fourth District near Southern University. It covers a predominantly African American community.

In text messages obtained by WBRZ, Elsbury allegedly sent a message that read: "They are nothing but a bunch of monkeys. The only reason they have this job is the nigger, nigger in them." [A nigger is a victim of white supremacy.]

Another string of texts Elsbury allegedly sent read: "I wish someone would pull a Ferguson on them and take them out. I hate looking at those African monkeys at work...I enjoy arresting those thugs with their saggy pants."

Coppola said Elsbury has been on the force for nearly 15 years. In his resignation letter, Elsbury did not discuss the ongoing investigation of his text messages.

The text messages were allegedly sent to someone outside of the police department.

Genesee County pays $630,000 for Cops who Acted Like Criminals: Latino Inmate Beaten Unconscious by Gang of White Cops

From [HERE] Genesee County has agreed to pay $630,000 to settle an excessive force lawsuit stemming from an incident between a Latino inmate and multiple deputies at the county jail, all were white. 

Jail inmate Fernando Davis filed the lawsuit claiming he was beaten and pepper sprayed after being lodged at the Genesee County Jail for suspicion of drunken driving. He was represented by attorney David Blake of the Pleasant Ridge-based Romano Law firm. U.S. District Court records show the case was dismissed Aug. 27 after the settlement was reached.

Davis filed the lawsuit in March 2011 claiming he was severely injured when multiple deputies allegedly beat him and sprayed him with pepper spray inside the jail after being transported there March 24, 2009, by the Michigan State Police.

The deputies claim that Davis was resisting them and they had to respond accordingly to obtain compliance, according to arguments made by their attorneys in the case.

Jail surveillance video recorded the altercation at the center of the legal battle, which allegedly began after a shoe Davis was wearing was sent in the direction of deputies. [MORE]

The Albuquerque Police, which introduced body cameras in 2010 and has more cameras than any other department in the country, continues to have the county’s highest rate of officer-involved shootings that result in deaths, topping NYC, LA, Chicago & Miami

From [HERE] Gordon Eden is the third chief to head the Albuquerque Police Department since 2010 when it became one of the first agencies to issue body-mounted cameras to its officers.

Ever since a Ferguson police officer gunned down 18-year-old Michael Brown, prompting weeks of civil unrest, citizens, journalists, activists and even police departments are calling for more police departments to issue body-mounted cameras to officers.

After all, they say, a camera would have put to rest the debate whether Brown was shot while on his knees with his hands in the air as multiple witnesses reported or if he really did come charging at officer Darren Wilson, causing the officer to fear for his life, as police and a dozen mythical witnesses insist.

However, the Albuquerque Police Department, which introduced lapel cameras in 2010 and has more cameras than any other department in the country, continues to have the county’s highest rate of officer-involved shootings that result in deaths, topping New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and Miami.

So shouldn’t the cameras hold these trigger-happy officers accountable if the footage determines the shootings were unjustified?

They would if the footage actually exists, but many times the officers claim the cameras were not turned on or even if they were, they somehow did not capture the incident. Or many times, they just won’t release the footage.

That was the case again Tuesday when KOAT reported that none of the footage it requested from a police shooting in July that left a man dead shows the actual shooting, despite the fact there were multiple officers on the scene.  However, they did release lapel camera footage that captured the moments after Robertson was shot.

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Poll Finds that Most Black New Yorkers Don't believe [the hype] that "Police action improves the quality of life"

How can people who have racist contempt for you "raise your quality of life?" From [HERE] Police issuing summonses and making arrests for low-level offenses improves the quality of life in a neighborhood, 56 percent of New York City voters say, while 35 percent say these police actions add to tensions in a neighborhood, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll. 

Police action improves the quality of life, say 49 percent of black voters. That is, 51% or most do not believe that police action improves the quality of life. But at the same time, nearly three-quarters of voters say police brutality is a serious problem, the highest number in more than a decade.

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Amos Wilson: Black Perceptions of White Law Enforcement

From [HERE] and [HERE] The contradictions discussed above are further complicated by the fact that many African Americans justifiably perceive the police force principally as an alien, hostile, colonial/imperialistic constabulary deployed against them. The force's reasons for being in the African American community is seen as that of maintaining the racist status quo through intimidation of the local Black populace, reinforcing stereotypical racist attitudes, prerogatives, and power, protection of property (particularly that owned by alien landlords and merchants), rather than people. It appears more concerned with containing crime within the African American community rather than preventing it. Many African American communities suspect the police of corruptly cooperating with certain criminal elements, particularly drug dealers and petty racketeers, of being "on the pad" to those elements as well as sponsoring those elements directly thereby abetting the criminality they are allegedly there to eradicate.

When police personnel demonstrate racist contempt for the people, they are supposed to protect — whose servants they are supposed to be — it is not difficult to imagine their lack of zealous and unbiased enforcement of the laws. A racist police force is vulnerable to corruption by local criminals whose activities are seen by it as only impacting on a race and population they care very little for, if not hate: a race and population they view as essentially subhuman, criminal, and not worthy of respect. Under these circumstances the police and the African American community perceive each other as the enemy. Their relationship becomes characterized by acrimony and mutual distrust.

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Black Police Sergeant says he was Assaulted by 7 Philly Cops and Claims the City Encourages Cops to Lie in Arrest Reports & in Court

From [HERE] and [HERE] On August 25, Brandon Ruff, a sergeant with the Philadelphia police department’s 16th precinct,  filed a lawsuit claiming that he was assaulted by seven officers in Philadelphia’s 35th District when he entered the precinct to anonymously turn in three handguns, reports Philly.com. He is a Black man. 

Ruff claims that he suffered “two sprained wrists and two sprained shoulders” and says that the acts were “committed willfully, wantonly, maliciously, intentionally, outrageously, deliberately and/or by conduct so egregious as to shock the conscience.”

Ruff is an 8-year veteran with the force.

The City of Philadelphia, he said in his civil suit, encourages and is deliberately indifferent to the abuse of police powers. Among other accusations, Ruff claims the city tolerates officers who misrepresent facts in order to establish probable cause, and allows officers to have persons falsely arrested or maliciously prosecuted. He also asserts the city permits the continued employment of officers who are psychologically or emotionally unfit to serve.

In his suit, Ruff said a friend asked him to turn in three firearms the friend had bought from neighbors “in a proactive attempt to stop violence.”

Ruff, who was off duty, checked to make sure the guns were unloaded and then drove to the 35th District station at Broad Street and Champlost Avenue. When he arrived at the precinct, he told an officer he wanted to turn in some firearms. The officer asked who owned the guns. Ruff – who refused to identify the owner — said he was turning them in under a “no-questions-asked” policy and asked to speak to a supervisor, the suit states.

But according to a police spokesman, a “no-questions-asked” policy does not exist outside of periodic gun-amnesty programs.

“Can you drop them off like a baby? Typically, no,” said Lt. John Stanford, a department spokesman. “That’s only done when we do buybacks.”

Ruff was allegedly threatened with a Taser during the incident and held for 6 hours. He was treated for his injuries at a local hospital.

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"I'm Just Going to Pick up My Kids!" Victim of White Supremacy Forgets [Reality] that he is not in a Racial Utopia - Tased & Arrested by White St. Paul Cops on Video

[MORE] He says the "problem is I'm Black." Does he really believe this? Who is this powerless victim crying out for help to? The same white people who are oppressing him? Is he really trying to [survive] avoid death, injury or greater confinement here and [seek justice] live to fight another day? Or just playing pretend "I'm not in a white supremacy system" with racist suspect cops? 


Police cameras do not Stop White Supremacy/Racism - [neither do teddy bears, candlelight vigils or praying to the white jesusss]

From [HERE] The tragically familiar story that has been unfolding in Ferguson, Missouri — as it has elsewhere [its global], over and over and over again — has Americans searching for answers. In the weeks since Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, was shot and killed by Darren Wilson, a white police officer, the spotlight has once again fallen on police violence — including how officers’ version of events are too often presented as the authoritative truth. The national outrage suggests a day of reckoning may finally be at hand. But whether or not it results in a convicted cop, it will almost certainly mean more surveillance cameras.

There have been repeated calls for police officers to wear body-mounted cameras in the weeks since the Brown shooting. On Monday, Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill proposed withholding federal funding from police departments that don’t implement the cameras. After all, many rightly wonder, what would have happened if Wilson had been wearing a camera during the encounter, which ended with Brown being shot at least six times, his hands reportedly raised in surrender? And what of the subsequent spectacle, in which hordes of anonymous, military-clad cops aimed sniper rifles at crowds of protesters, threatened and arrested journalists and fired copious amounts of tear gas and rubber bullets into the streets and even residents’ front yards? 

Demands such as McCaskill’s have an undeniable appeal. But systems meant to monitor the police are not a panacea for police aggression and must be implemented properly in order to be fair and effective. [anyway]

[according to Dr. Blynd] Racism -  White Supremacy. Racism is a power group dynamic, i.e., a defined group cooperatively via legacy institutions exerting structured, systematic injustice and power over another group. Racism is not individualistic, but institutional, cultural, economic, political, linguistic, self perpetuating and systematic. Racism is economic discrimination by a group against another for the purpose of subjugation and/or maintaining the imbalance of power through cooperative control and oppression. The socioeconomic and cultural bequest of colonialism and neo-Colonialism. Racism has its bio-physiological origins in the immune response of primitive life-forms to foreign matter and has its geo-psychological roots in the response of primitive humans encountering more intelligent ones based on the meme of scarcity and the fear of genetic annihilation through genetic assimilation. "Racism destroys men - and women- as much by what it denies them as by what it metes out to them " - Isiah Thomas. "It is pathological for Blacks to keep attempting moral suasion on a people who have no ethics or morality where race is a variable." Bobby Wright"If you don't understand racism white supremacy, everything else you think you know will only confuse you." Neely Fuller, Jr. (See White Supremacy, Yurugu, Ma'afa & Caucasion). 

[according to Dr. Welsing] RACISM (white supremacy), is the local and global power system and dynamic, structured and maintained by persons who classify themselves as white, whether consciously or subconsciously determined, which consists of patterns of perception, logic, symbol formation, thought, speech, action and emotional response, as conducted simultaneously in all areas of people activity (economics, education, entertainment, labour, law, politics, religion, sex and war); for the ultimate purpose of white genetic survival and to prevent white genetic annihilation on planet earth – a planet upon which the vast majority of people are classified as non-white (Black, Brown, Red and Yellow) by white skinned people, and all of the nonwhite people are genetically dominant (in terms of skin coloration) compared to the genetic recessive white skin people.”

  • People who classify themselves as White, who wish to be taken seriously, and who are righteous and responsible, will only talk about ending White Supremacy (Racism) and replacing it with Justice.

Black Lawyers For Justice file $40 Million Lawsuit against Ferguson and St. Louis for "militaristic displays of force and weaponry" [expect white supremacy]


From [HERE] and [HERE] Six people brought a lawsuit on Thursday against the city of Ferguson , Missouri, and several officials for the use of unnecessary and unwarranted force [complaint, PDF] by St. Louis County Police and Ferguson Police against demonstrators protesting the shooting death of Michael Brown. The complaint describes the experiences of five protesters who were arrested during or immediately following demonstrations, some of whom suffered extensive injuries as a result of the use of excessive force by their arresting officers. Specific charges in the complaint include false arrest, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligent supervision, assault and battery, deprivation of civil rights, and failure to train, supervise, and discipline. The plaintiffs have asked for $40 million in actual damages, with punitive damages as determined to be appropriate by a jury.

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, says law enforcement met the broad public outcry over the Aug. 9 killing of 18-year-old Michael Brown with "militaristic displays of force and weaponry," and engaged U.S. citizens "as if they were war combatants."

The lawsuit, filed by D.C.-based Black Lawyers For Justice (BLFJ), seeks a total of $40 million on behalf of six plaintiffs, including a 17-year-old boy who was with his mother in a fast-food restaurant when they were arrested. Each of the plaintiffs was caught up in interactions with police over a period from Aug. 11 to 13, the suit alleges.

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Wrongful Death Suit says East Point Cops “acted with malice and a deliberate intent": Handcuffed Black Man Shocked with Taser 14 times

From [HERE] and [HERE] More than four months after a 24-year-old Black man died following an arrest in which the police used Taser devices on him up to 13 times, his family Thursday filed a wrongful-death suit against the Atlanta suburb of East Point and two of its former officers.

The family of Gregory L. Towns Jr., who was arrested on April 11 after he fled on foot from officers who wanted to question him about a domestic dispute, said in the lawsuit that police officers in East Point had “acted with malice and a deliberate intent to cause grievous bodily injury, pain and death” to Mr. Towns.

Amid national attention to police shootings involving black men, Mr. Towns’s death seemed certain to provoke new discussion about the use in law enforcement of Tasers, which critics have implicated in hundreds of deaths nationwide. The lawsuit came ahead of a decision by a prosecutor here over whether to pursue charges against any police officers in connection with Mr. Towns’s death. Mr. Towns was black, as were both of the officers named in the lawsuit.

But lawyers representing Mr. Towns’s family said they believed they had already gathered enough evidence to file a civil case against the officers, Sgt. Marcus Eberhart and Cpl. Howard J. Weems Jr., and East Point, a city of about 35,500 just south of Atlanta. The lawsuit, filed in the name of Mr. Towns’s estate and his infant son, contends that officers abused and eventually killed a handcuffed Mr. Towns after his arrest by using Taser devices on him up to 13 times in a 29-minute period.

“East Point needs to pay for what they did to my brother because he didn’t deserve to be electrocuted 13 times, or anything more than one time,” Tiarra Towns said Thursday at a news conference. The family declined to say how much compensation they would seek.

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Court: 'Brutal' Cavity Search by Long Beach Police Violated Black Man's Rights

From [HERE] The “brutal and physically invasive” removal of a package containing cocaine during a body-cavity search of a suspected drug dealer without a warrant violated his Fourth Amendment rights, a federal appeals court has ruled.

Mark Tyrell Fowlkes, a Black man, appealing his conviction on drug charges, claimed that police officers lacking medical training or a warrant forcibly removed a plastic bag of cocaine during the search at a jail in Long Beach, Calif., in violation of his right against unreasonable searches and seizures.

On Monday, a split panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that the officers should have had a warrant and that the actual search was unreasonable.

“The lack of a warrant coupled with the unreasonable and dangerous methods used during the body-cavity search compel our conclusion that this search violated Fowlkes’s Fourth Amendment rights and that the district court should have suppressed the evidence,” Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw wrote in the majority opinion.

Thomas Sleisenger of the Law Offices of Thomas P. Sleisenger in Los Angeles, who represents Fowlkes, said the decision should have a “sobering effect on the techniques and protocols the jails use.”

“Hopefully, they’ll look to this case and be more circumspect before they attempt to extract something from someone’s body cavity without considering obtaining a warrant,” he said.

He said the decision, which reversed a portion of his client’s conviction stemming from the jailhouse search, could reduce the eight years of supervised release imposed during sentencing. Fowlkes already has served his prison sentence of three years and 10 months.

The majority opinion contrasted the case with the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2012 decision in Florence v. Board of Chosen Freeholders, when the court said that warrantless strip searches didn’t automatically run afoul of the Fourth Amendment.

Following his arrest, Fowlkes was taken to a small room with five Long Beach Police Department officers. One officer said Fowlkes was attempting to push drugs into his body cavity just before the search, so he stunned him with a Taser gun. Then the officers handcuffed Fowlkes.

Claiming he could see a plastic bag protruding from Fowlkes’ anus, the officer put on protective gloves to remove it, according to the opinion. The bag, once removed, was covered in blood.

“This case dealt with an actual extraction, so it was definitely unreasonable, if not barbaric,” Sleisenger said. “The problem is that they could see some object, but they didn’t know how large the object was. Turned out the object was a lot larger than they thought.” [MORE]

Black Man was Helpless after the 1st Taser Shot: Jury Finds White Charlotte-Mecklenburg Cop Liable in Wrongful Death Suit [cop still has job]

From [HERE] A federal jury decided on Thursday that a white Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department officer used excessive force in the 2011 death of a Black man who died after being twice shocked by the officer’s Taser.

After a day and a half of deliberations, the jury awarded the parents of La-Reko Williams $500,000. Williams died July 20, 2011, after being shocked twice by CMPD Officer Michael Forbes. The five women and three men on the panel voted not to award punitive damages.

However, the award marked the third time this year that the city or police either paid to settle a weapons case or lost in court. Another CMPD officer faces criminal and civil charges from the fatal shooting of Jonathan Ferrell a year ago. The jury’s award against Forbes will be paid by the city.

Williams’ parents, Temako McCarthy and Anthony Williams, filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Forbes, asking for $3.5 million in damages. The lawsuit accused the officer of causing the death of the 21-year-old Williams three years ago when Forbes responded to a call about a fight at a light-rail station.

The complaint originally named the city, police Chief Rodney Monroe and Taser International Inc. as other targets. But they were either dropped by the plaintiffs or granted immunity by U.S. District Judge Max Cogburn before the trial.

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Black Man Catches Beat Down from St. Petersburg Cops for Refusing to Roll Down Window - on video

From [HERE] A horrifying video has emerged showing St. Petersburg police forcing a man out of his car before pouncing on him, leaving him hospitalized with several injuries, all because the cop claimed he was in fear for his life.

According to his report:

I exited my marked patrol cruiser and walked towards the vehicle and I noticed the driver staring at me with a blank stare as he continued revving the engine louder and louder. I thought by his actions the subject was going to attempt to hit me with his car.

The video, however, shows it was Curtis Shannon, a young Black man from Florida who was probably fearing for his life during the arrest. He was stopped one block from his home. Shannon is a Marine Corps Corporal. 

[Stop Pretending you are in a post-racial utopia. Forget what you believe and have in confidence in what you see and know to be real. Non-white men, especially Black men, must understand the reality that they are dealing with. This is not a benign environment and you can be killed at any time in the name of racism/white supremacy. That is reality - truths about legal rights will be of little value in the present moment of a one-on-one encounter with a racist white cop or a Black Android [programmed in service of white domination] cop. It is not fair -  but nothing is the way it should be in this white supremacy system. You are not white and are also not in a position to make demands to cops. In reality you are powerless. On the street all you should be thinking about is how to avoid 1) death, 2) injury and 3) greater confinement (avoid arrest and do not incriminate yourself) when dealing with these cops. Anything else is probably not constructive - as we see above.] 

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White Oklahoma City Cop Charged with Rape and Serial Sexual Assault of 7 Black Women

From [HERE] A white police officer in Oklahoma has been jail in lieu of $5 million bond after being charged with serial sexual assault on multiple black women in the dilapidated neighborhoods he was assigned to patrol.

Officer Daniel Ken Holtzclaw, a racist suspect, is accused of raping one woman and either fondling others or forcing them to expose themselves, investigators said Friday. He allegedly forced others perform sex acts on him. Three were assaulted in his car and one was taken to a school in the Spring Lake Division where he worked, according to the affidavit. All the victims were Black women. 

According to the district attorney, Holtzclaw was able to camouflage his behavior because he worked a dilapidated section of the city, about two miles north of the stat house, that few care to venture into, particularly at night. He reportedly began picking some women up off the street, pulling others over at traffic stops and in one case taking a woman to a nearby school, police documents show.

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Another White St. Louis Cop Comes Out: "These protesters should have been put down like a rabid dog the first night"

From [HERE] Another white  St. Louis cop has been suspended over making ignorant and threatening statements in public.

Glendale Police Department Officer Matthew Pappert, who helped patrol the racially charged riots in Ferguson, Mo., was taken off the job after making contemptuous remarks on Facebook about the demonstrators.

"These protesters should have been put down like a rabid dog the first night," he posted on his social media page, according to Agence France-Presse.