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Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

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Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

Nice.

The Baltimore Police Department is currently in court over one of the biggest scandals in the history of American law enforcement. The corruption case is replete with intrigue as police reveal secrets that sound like something out of an urban-fiction novel or a lost season of The Wire. It has revealed how one of America’s largest cities just happened to be filled with crooked cops, but no one seems to be talking about it outside of Baltimore.

According to the Baltimore Sun, it started when a 19-year-old woman from New Jersey overdosed in 2011 and authorities began tracing the origin of the drugs. It led them to a Baltimore drug crew and the discovery that a Baltimore police officer was involved. By the time they finished investigating, eight members of the elite Gun Trace Task Force had been charged with crimes ranging from racketeering to robbery.

You want robbery? How about the story of the corrupt squad stopping a drug dealer during a traffic stop and robbing him of $6,500, then going to the man’s home without a warrant and taking another $100,000 out of a safe? Sgt. Wayne Jenkins would ask suspected drug dealers, “If you could put together a crew of guys and rob the biggest drug dealer in town, who would it be?”

If you’re interested in police targeting regular citizens, maybe you should read about how the Maurice Ward had a technique of driving fast at groups of people, slamming on the brakes and chasing whoever ran. Perhaps you hear how Jenkins believed that all young men with backpacks were dope boys. Or people who drove Honda Accords with tinted windows.

And then there’s the revelation that the supervisor of the unit instructed officers to carry a toy gun just in case they found themselves “in a jam” and needed to plant one. When one of the officers, Marcus Tayor, was arrested, officials couldn’t figure out why he had a toy gun in his glove compartment.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

https://nypost.com/2018/02/23/disgraced-deputy-touted-school-cops-at-board-meeting/

So, Michael Savage had a commentary question based on what this cop's punishment should be. I had a thought... Given the police seem to want to be militarized, if this sort of thing were to happen in the US military, what comes from that? Should we consider the same here, with the same Constitutional "protections" offered in a court martial? If they want something, they should have it, and everything that goes with it.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-cards="hidden" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A police officer has been charged with 28 sex crimes <a href="https://t.co/g5Aci4CcpY">https://t.co/g5Aci4CcpY</a></p>— TIME (@TIME) <a href="https://twitter.com/TIME/status/968586557883117568?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">February 27, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

An Orchards Worth of Bad Apples

Secret files obtained by BuzzFeed News reveal that from 2011 to 2015 at least 319 New York Police Department employees who committed offenses serious enough to merit firing were allowed to keep their jobs.

Many of the officers lied, cheated, stole, or assaulted New York City residents. At least fifty employees lied on official reports, under oath, or during an internal affairs investigation. Thirty-eight were found guilty by a police tribunal of excessive force, getting into a fight, or firing their gun unnecessarily. Fifty-seven were guilty of driving under the influence. Seventy-one were guilty of ticket-fixing. One officer, Jarrett Dill, threatened to kill someone. Another, Roberson Tunis, sexually harassed and inappropriately touched a fellow officer. Some were guilty of lesser offenses, like mouthing off to a supervisor.

At least two dozen of these employees worked in schools. Andrew Bailey was found guilty of touching a female student on the thigh and kissing her on the cheek while she was sitting in his car. In a school parking lot, while he was supposed to be on duty, Lester Robinson kissed a woman, removed his shirt, and began to remove his pants. And Juan Garcia, while off duty, illegally sold prescription medication to an undercover officer.

In every instance, the police commissioner, who has final authority in disciplinary decisions, assigned these officers to “dismissal probation,” a penalty with few practical consequences. The officer continues to do their job at their usual salary. They may get less overtime and won’t be promoted during that period, which usually lasts a year. When the year is over, so is the probation.

The article is insane...
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!


Much like politicians who needlessly fear the NRA, big city mayors and top cops fear their respective versions of the FOP (not all police department unions representing the sworn officers are affiliated with the FOP). If the rest of the unions had the pull of the FOP no one could get fired from any job, McDonalds burger flippers would be making at least $15 everywhere, and union officials would be calling the shots at most large industrial corporations in America.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

Police officer in Minneapolis will be charged in death of Justine Damond.
 
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