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Showing posts with label police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label police. Show all posts

Saturday, March 3, 2018

Law And Order From The Right And Left

When we break down the police response to the Valentine's Day massacre at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas school in Florida, we see first-hand the fallacies of both the Left's and the Right's arguments in support of police power.
The anti-gun Left would have all of America disarmed and under police protection. Or, as New York Congressweasel Jerrold Nadler once stated, "One of the definitions of a nation state is that the state has a monopoly on legitimate violence. And the state ought to have a monopoly on legitimate violence." The "state" means local, state and federal police agencies.
Yet the anti-gun Left has, for the last several years, protested police abuses — against blacks especially — and called for police to stand down during periods of anti-police rioting and basic unrest over "social justice" causes like opposing "white supremacy" (real and imagined) or over statues of currently out-of-favor persons.
The pro-police Right (what I call the "law and order" crowd) considers police all but infallible and believes everyone should submit to police authority — even when police are acting outside the law. Whenever citizens are beaten, tazed or shot, the "law and order" crowd will say that if the citizen had just complied with police, the outcome would have been peaceful.
For them, justification can be found for almost any abusive, right-infringing action by law enforcement officers (LEOs, or as I call them, legally entitled to oppress), especially when it's exercised against minorities or those they consider society's dregs.
Members of the "law and order" crowd devalue life based on prejudices and propaganda. They complain and clamor for protection from government abuses against themselves, but endorse (or at least abide) government abuses on people who are "different."
This attitude stems from the faux "war on drugs" and class warfare propaganda. "Class warfare" is a code word for "race warfare," and it promotes racism and bigotry. It's a tool employed by the elites to create a chasm between the people, and it's been very successful.
The pro-police Right has venerated police based on the false notion that they are "risking their lives" to "protect us" (being a cop is not even in the top 10 of dangerous professions) and that their training to lie to us and treat us like serfs is necessary to "enforce law and order."
Police have morphed from the quaint notion that they were once "peace officers" into the reality that they are "law enforcers." But as the late columnist William Norman Grigg pointed out, policing was militarized from the start. LEOs see it as their job to "enforce" the law no matter what it takes, no matter how ridiculous the law may be or even regardless of whether the law actually exists. Most of the laws they enforce are victimless crimes (traffic laws, pedestrian laws, gun possession, prostitution, drug use, etc.) with laws forbidding those acts created to serve as revenue streams for local government and/or to steal the people's liberties.
If there's no actual law to enforce, police often make one or more up out of thin air, claiming that innocuous activities like watching or videotaping police activities — including arrests on public streets, walking in certain neighborhoods, parking on certain streets and putting trash in trash cans — are crimes.
LEOs have come to think of themselves as gods above the law whose commands are to be obeyed immediately and without question. Any hesitation often leads to the "suspect" being left bleeding and broken, quivering from electricity introduced by a stun gun or even dead from a gunshot, choking or severed spinal cord.
While the gunman or gunmen were shooting school children inside the Douglas school, at least four Broward (rhymes with coward) County deputies stayed outside — three of them hiding behind a patrol car with guns drawn. The fourth, school safety officer Scot Peterson, stood outside the building for four of the six minutes that the massacre was in progress.
None of the armed and trained agents of the state who were on site during the shooting went inside the school to protect the unarmed and defenseless students and faculty. One of the deputies claims that he was ordered not to go in, as have several other first responders. That's quite likely, as Chuck Baldwinwrites, because it's standard police protocol for patrol officers to wait for militarized SWAT teams to be deployed to confront active shooters. In fact, according to an FBI report titled "A Study of Active Shooter Incidents in the United States between 2000 and 2013," police engage an active shooter only 28 percent of the time.
The Douglas school shooter was not unknown to police. Media reports indicate that police responded to calls of domestic violence, bizarre behavior, threats and other violent episodes involving the shooter some 26-43 times in recent years. The FBI was repeatedly tipped off that he posed a threat to the school and to others.
Yet the state — which the left believes should have a monopoly on violence and its agents should be the only ones with guns — did nothing.
Nor are police required to act. The U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that police don't have a constitutional duty to protect a person from harm.
While the shooter's threats and violent actions and warnings about his behavior from people who know him was not enough to spur Broward County police and the FBI to action, there can be little doubt that had one of those agencies suspected the shooter might have had an unapproved plant or medication in his possession, the full weight of police power would have been brought down on his head.
The raid to take him out would have been conducted with surplus military gear like armored personnel carriers, grenades and rocket launchers acquired from the Pentagon and with officers dressed in full body armor wielding M-16s and using night vision.
Few things bring out the long knives more than when I write about police abuse. Yet American police kill almost 1,000 people every year, most of them unarmed and many of them either complying or attempting to comply with multiple commands being barked at them from many different angles while multiple guns are being pointed in their direction.
Police solve less than two-thirds of all murders committed, and in some cities (New Orleans, for instance) the murder clearance rate is only 30 percent. There is only a 1 in 5 chance that property stolen from you will be recovered.
So what good are police? Police power props up the state and provides cover for all its nefarious activities. For police, the motto "To protect and serve," is really all about protecting government and their own gang and serving the state as revenue collectors and enforcers, not protecting the people.
They cannot and do not protect us, but they are all too willing to abuse us. When the left and right embrace and submit to them in their current form, they are advocating for their own slavery.
Yours for the truth,
Bob Livingston
Bob Livingston
Editor, The Bob Livingston Letter™ 

Sunday, November 19, 2017

Body Cameras Make Police Reports More Accuate So Now Civil Rights Group Hate Them


Remember When Civil Rights Groups Wanted Police Bodycams? Look At What They're Saying Now.

Photo by Linda Davidson/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Remember when civil rights advocates demanded accountability from police and wanted them to wear bodycams? Those bodycams cost police departments a good chunk of money.
But now, a group called The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights avers that bodycams pose a “threat to civil rights.” They released a report titled, “The Illusion of Accuracy: How Body-Worn Camera Footage Can Distort Evidence," in which they decry bodycams because the officers can view the footage before they write incident reports.

In the report, Vanita Gupta, the leader of the Leadership Conference, who is a former ACLU director and former acting assistant attorney general of the civil rights division under former President Obama, writes, “The vast majority of the nation’s leading police departments with body-worn camera programs allow unrestricted footage review – meaning, officers are permitted to review footage from body-worn cameras whenever they’d like, including before writing their incident reports or making statements.”
The report adds:
Unrestricted footage review creates an illusion of accuracy because it produces a false impression about how much officers actually remember about an incident. It makes officers’ memories appear to be more accurate, and thus more credible, than the memories of other eyewitnesses — which can distort how an independent factfinder, like a judge or a jury, might understand how an incident truly unfolded. In the worst cases, because of the inherent limits of body-worn cameras, unrestricted footage review allows officers to square their version of events to the footage, and potentially create false beliefs about what actually happened.
You would think that those championing civil rights would want to simply see the facts of the case, but the report seems to be more concerned that a police officer might be more credible than some eyewitness:
Yet unrestricted footage review gives officers the opportunity to augment their initial incident reports with information that would not otherwise be available to them from their own memory. This makes officers’ reports artificially consistent with video footage and appear to be unnaturally comprehensive and credible, particularly compared to reports of other witnesses to events.
And as we all know, whether it’s Ferguson, Missouri or anywhere else, supposed eyewitnesses are uniformly accurate in their depiction of events.

Monday, June 26, 2017

Gay Parade Interrupted By Cop Hating BLM Malcontents


BLM Protesters at Gay Pride Parade Demand Removal of All Cops


 Print

Black Lives Matter protesters interrupted a the gay pride parade in Minneapolis, Minnesota on Sunday and made an absurd demand.
Unhappy with the organizers of the Twin Cities Pride Festival having policeman at the event, WCCO reported that the Black Lives Matter protesters stopped the parade for about an hour and demanded the officers leave.
Organizers of the pride parade had disinvited police after St. Anthony police officer Jeronimo Yanez was acquitted in the 2016 death of Philando Castile. However, on Friday, were re-invited.
Around 40 officers were at the march, including Minneapolis Police Chief Janeé Harteau, who worked to have the officers re-invited. Harteau, who is openly gay, said the move was “divisive,” adding that it “really hurt so many in our community,” including LGBT officers.
Just after the parade began, Black Lives Matter demonstrators jumped in front of an unmarked police cruiser and demanded the officers be removed from the parade.


Then they staged a die-in, followed by a moment of silence for those who had been affected by police violence.


The Minneapolis Star Tribune reported that the protesters marched about two blocks ahead of the parade and headed toward Loring Park, where the Pride Festival was taking place. No arrests were made, according to police spokesman Corey Schmidt.
The fact that BLM protesters interrupted a gay pride event demonstrates how the left continues to destroy itself. BLM apparently wants to be the most victimized group in the Democrat Party — a party divided by group identity. With so many groups vying for the top tier of victimhood, no one wins.
Furthermore, police were at the parade to help protect those participating from possible attacks. Apparently, protecting people is not as important as protesting police.
Share this story on Facebook and Twitter and let us know your thoughts on BLM protesters demanding police leave this gay pride parade.
Do you think the left will destroy itself from all of its divisions?

Thursday, May 4, 2017

As Police Stop Policing, The Country Will Slowly Descend Into Chaos. How Much Longer Does The Country Have?

EXCLUSIVE: FBI report finds officers ‘de-policing’ as anti-cop hostility becomes ‘new norm’

Study on cop killers shows 28 percent motivated by animus toward police; others wanted to avoid custody






Pew survey: Officers more reluctant to use force,
make stops
KSHB - Kansas City, MO
 - The Washington Times - Thursday, May 4, 2017
An unclassified FBI study on last year’s cop-killing spree found officers are “de-policing”
 amid concerns that anti-police defiance fueled in part by movements like Black Lives
 Matter has become the “new norm.”
“Departments — and individual officers — have increasingly made the decision to stop
 engaging in proactive policing,” said the report by the FBI Office of Partner Engagement
 obtained by The Washington Times.
The report, “Assailant Study — Mindsets and Behaviors,” said that the social-justice
movement sparked by the 2014 death of 18-year-old Michael Brown at the hands of
 an officer in Ferguson, Missouri, “made it socially acceptable to challenge and discredit
the actions of law enforcement.”
FBI spokesman Matthew Bertron said the study was written in April.
“Nearly every police official interviewed agreed that for the first time, law enforcement
not only felt that their national political leaders [publicly] stood against them, but also
 that the politicians’ words and actions signified that disrespect to law enforcement
 was acceptable in the aftermath of the Brown shooting,” the study said.
As a result, “Law enforcement officials believe that defiance and hostility displayed
 by assailants toward law enforcement appears to be the new norm.”




The report examined 50 of the 53 incidents last year in which officers were killed in
 the line of duty, excluding the three cases that involved minors or perpetrators who
 remain unknown.
Most of the assailants who used deadly force against officers did so in an effort to
 avoid being taken into custody, but 28 percent were motivated by hatred of police
 and a desire to “kill law enforcement,” in some cases fueled by social and political
movements.
“The assailants inspired by social and/or political reasons believed that attacking
police officers was their way to ‘get justice’ for those who had been, in their view,
 unjustly killed by law enforcement,” the study said.

The perpetrators said their animus toward police was based on their own experiences
 as well as “what they heard and read in the media about other incidents involving
law enforcement shootings.”
Those charged in the July 2016 shootings of police in Dallas and Baton Rouge
 “said they were influenced by the Black Lives Matter movement, and their belief
that law enforcement was targeting black males,” the report said.
Five officers were killed in the Dallas ambush, which coincided with a protest against
 police shootings of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota, while three officers died
in the Baton Rouge massacre.
Last year was particularly deadly for police: Sixty-four were shot and killed in the
 line of duty, a 56 percent increase from 2015. Of those, 21 were killed in ambush-
style attacks, “the highest total in more than two decades,” according to the National
 Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.
While racial tension has been the focus of deadly police encounters since the
 Brown shooting, nearly half of the assailants who killed officers in 2016 —
48 percent — were white, the FBI study found.
Of the rest, 36 percent were black, 14 percent were Hispanic, and 2 percent were
 Native Alaskan. Nearly all — 86 percent — had criminal histories; 60 percent had
used drugs, and 32 percent were under the influence at the time of the attack.
In addition, 26 percent were under active warrants, and 24 percent had known
gang affiliations. All were men.
The report also found that the trend toward drug decriminalization and reduced
sentencing had emboldened perpetrators, making them believe that “consequences
 no longer exist for criminal acts, especially drug offenses.”
“Across the country, law enforcement link the decriminalization of drugs to the
increase in violent attacks on law enforcement,” said the study.
Such factors have “had the effect of ‘de-policing’ in law enforcement agencies
 across the country, which assailants have exploited.”
The report cited an example in which an officer was slammed to the ground
and beaten but refused to shoot the assailant “for fear of community backlash.”
“The officer informed the superintendent that the officer chose not to shoot
because the officer didn’t want his/her ‘family or department to have to go
through the scrutiny the next day on the national news,’” said the study
.