Tag Archives: officers

Cops Vs. Cameras: The Killing of Kelly Thomas & The Power of New Media

http://www.youtube.com/v/O7YFKm9gnKo

Go here to read the rest:

This video includes graphic images. Viewer discretion is advised. The autopsy results from the death of Kelly Thomas , a schizophrenic drifter who was allegedy beaten to death by Fullerton, California police will be announced today by Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas. Rackauckas will also announce whether he will file charges against the officers involved in Thomas’ death, following… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Reason Magazine – Hit & Run Discovery Date : 21/09/2011 15:04 Number of articles : 2

Cops Vs. Cameras: The Killing of Kelly Thomas & The Power of New Media

One-Time Is Wildin’ Again! Bronx Teenager Beaten For Using The Word “Doo-Doo”

So one-time can beat on us but we can’t use potty words? In a classic case of bad timing and worse police, a high school student named Tyre Davis was walking past police officers scraping their shoes when he noticed a quite pungent smell. He remarked that “it smells like doo-doo”. Immediately thereafter, officers arrested him for disorderly conduct. After he was released, Davis claims that the officers followed him into an alley and beat him up, punching him on the head and neck and causing him to fall and hit his head on a brick. As if it’s going to do anything, Davis has filed charges. We’ll keep you updated on if these police even get what’s coming to them.

See the rest here:
One-Time Is Wildin’ Again! Bronx Teenager Beaten For Using The Word “Doo-Doo”

Lil Wayne’s “Tha Carter IV” Album Cover [PHOTO]

See the original post:

Lil Wayne’s “The Carter IV” album cover has leaked. As we previously reported, the album has already been pushed back to June 14th from a May release date. What do y’all think? Is the album cover a pass or fail? Let us know in the comments box! We wonder if that track list that has leaked is the official final? Spotted @ TheSocietyOnline.biz RELATED: Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter IV Pushed Back To June RELATED: Lil Wayne’s UNOFFICIAL Tracklisting For Tha Carter IV RELATED : Lil Wayne’s Security Guards Arrested For Impersonating Police Officers RELATED: Lil Wayne Performs “Look At Me Now” At Philips Arena [VIDEO] RELATED: VIDEO: What Set Is Lil Wayne Claiming?

Lil Wayne’s “Tha Carter IV” Album Cover [PHOTO]

Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter IV Pushed Back To June

Originally posted here:

It looks like Lil Wayne fans will have to wait an extra month for Tha Carter IV album. The highly anticipated album has been pushed back to June. Rapdose.com reports that the album was not pushed back due to the track list being leaked online. Click here for the full article. RELATED: Lil Wayne’s UNOFFICIAL Tracklisting For Tha Carter IV RELATED : Lil Wayne’s Security Guards Arrested For Impersonating Police Officers RELATED: Lil Wayne Performs “Look At Me Now” At Philips Arena [VIDEO]

Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter IV Pushed Back To June

Gaddafi loses more Libyan cities

http://www.youtube.com/v/4OispaOm8r4

Follow this link:

Staff | Tripoli | February 23 Aljazeera – (23 Feb) Muammar Gaddafi, Libya’s long-standing ruler, has reportedly lost control of more cities as anti-government protests continue to sweep the African nation despite his threat of a brutal crackdown. Protesters in Misurata said on Wednesday they had wrested the western city from government control. In a statement on the internet, army officers stationed… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Agonist Discovery Date : 23/02/2011 21:50 Number of articles : 2

Gaddafi loses more Libyan cities

Pure Comedy Or Irony?: Bank Robber Takes Hostage, Slips And Falls On Ice, Then Is Shot & Killed By Cops [Video]

Police shot and killed a suspected bank robber trying to escape with a female hostage Friday after he stumbled in a pile of snow from this week’s storm and the woman slipped away. When the man walked out of the Capital One bank branch in a Washington suburb, he was holding a gun to the bank teller’s head and was using her as a shield. The suspect also had a fake bomb taped to his body, police said. Officers were already outside the bank as the suspect walked out, and the confrontation unfolded on television with a helicopter camera hovering overhead. Video shows him backing away from police with the woman when the suspect tripped over a pile of snow from Wednesday’s storm. The woman ran away from the suspect toward police and held her hands up to cover her ears. Gunfire erupted shortly afterward. Takoma Park Police Chief Ronald Ricucci said the suspect was killed. “From our point of view, it looks like it was a successful resolution,” said Prince George’s County police Maj. Andy Ellis, adding that three of his officers fired at the suspect. “Things were changing very quickly, and the officers had to make split-second decisions.” Montgomery County Police Chief Thomas Manger said the robbery was unusual because the suspect appeared to have a bomb, as well as a hostage, and because officers reached the scene so quickly that the situation was still unfolding. Police from at least three jurisdictions responded to the scene because Takoma Park is near the border of Montgomery and Prince George’s counties. The city also has its own police force. Besides the device that looked like a bomb strapped to the suspect, a suspicious device also was reported inside the bank. Both ended up being plastic foam when checked by a bomb squad, police said. But the potential for an explosion affected the response by police officers, Ellis said. At least three people were treated for injuries that were not life-threatening. A police officer was grazed in the leg by a bullet. One person was pistol-whipped — the woman whom the suspect later used as a shield — and another person was treated for shock, police said. Bill Benjamin, who witnessed the incident from a nearby store, told FOX 5 that he had walked outside to take out the trash. He said he heard three quick shots fired and saw police chase down the suspect. Herschel Ivy, who saw the incident from across the street, told FOX 5 that he saw the suspect’s hands go up when shots were fired. Ivy said he heard seven or eight gunshots fired as the hostage ran toward police. “She ran directly through the cordon of police officers,” Ivy said. “You couldn’t tell if they were firing from the left or from the right.”

View post:
Pure Comedy Or Irony?: Bank Robber Takes Hostage, Slips And Falls On Ice, Then Is Shot & Killed By Cops [Video]

Protesters attack car carrying Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwal

Demonstrators kicked the Rolls-Royce as it travelled to the Royal Variety Performance in central London. White paint and bottles were thrown over the car and a window shattered. The Prince and Duchess were “unharmed” and continued with their engagement at the London Palladium, a Clarence House spokesman said. The attack occurred on Regent Street at the end of a day of protest that turned into a riot and left 10 police officers injured, six of them seriously. Matthew Maclachlan, who witnessed the attack on the Prince’s car, said: “The police cars at the front of the convoy drove straight into crowds at the top of Regent Street. They got trapped in that mob and it meant that Charles and Camilla were on their own further down the road except for a Jaguar travelling behind them. “Charles and Camilla’s car ran into such a concentration of people that it had to stop. It was stationary for a lot of the time, then would squeeze forward an inch. They had just one bodyguard in the car with them and a chauffeur. More………. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/theroyalfamily/8192767/Tuition-fees-p… added by: CarlosBobthe3rd

3 New Orleans Police Convicted In Post-Katrina Killing, Burning Of Body

NEW ORLEANS — A former New Orleans police officer was convicted Thursday of fatally shooting a man in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath and another officer was convicted of burning the man's body in a case that exposed one of the ugliest chapters in the police department's troubled history. A federal jury also convicted a third officer of writing a false report on the deadly shooting of 31-year-old Henry Glover, but two others were acquitted of charges stemming from the alleged cover-up. The jury of five men and seven women convicted former officer David Warren of manslaughter in the shooting death of 31-year-old Henry Glover outside a strip mall on Sept. 2, 2005. Prosecutors said Warren shot an unarmed man in the back. Officer Gregory McRae was convicted of burning Glover's body in a car. Lt. Dwayne Scheuermann was acquitted of that charge. Both were cleared of charges they beat the men who had brought the dying Glover to a makeshift police compound in search of help. Lt. Travis McCabe was convicted of writing a false report on the shooting and lying to the FBI and a grand jury. Lt. Robert Italiano was cleared of charges he submitted the false report and lied to the FBI. “This was a case that needed to be aired,” U.S. District Judge Lance Africk said after the verdicts were read aloud. Some of the officers hugged each other before they left the courtroom, while their relatives tried to console each other. Glover's relatives sobbed as they embraced each other. Rebecca Glover, Henry's aunt, said the verdict doesn't close the case for her. “This has been a long, anguishing time,” she said. “All of them should have been found guilty. They were all in on it.” Warren, who has been in custody since his indictment earlier this year, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison. Prosecutors asked Africk to jail McRae and McCabe while they await sentencing. The judge set a hearing Friday on that request. Warren's attorney, Julian Murray, said he planned to appeal. “I don't think people understand the split-second decisions police officers sometime have to make,” he said. A total of 20 current or former New Orleans police officers have been charged this year in a series of Justice Department civil rights investigations. The probe of Glover's death was the first of those cases to be tried. This isn't the first time federal authorities have tried to clean up the city's police department. The Justice Department launched a broad review of the force in the 1990s, when it was reeling from a string of lurid corruption cases. An officer, Antoinette Frank, was convicted of killing her patrol partner in a 1995 robbery. Another officer, Len Davis, was convicted of arranging the 1994 murder of Kim Groves, a woman who had filed a brutality complaint against him. All five of the officers charged in the Glover case testified during the trial, describing the grueling, dangerous conditions they endured after the Aug. 29, 2005 storm, when thousands of desperate people were trapped in the flooded city. Looting was rampant and bodies rotted on the streets for days because there was nowhere to take them, officers recalled. With lives on the line, the officers said they had no time to write reports or investigate anything but the most serious of crimes. U.S. Attorney Jim Letten said the jury rejected the notion that stress from Katrina was a defense for the officers' actions. “Tonight's verdict is a critical phase in the recovery and healing of this city, of the people of this region,” Letten said. The jury had to weigh the defendants' testimony against the words of several officers who admitted they initially lied to the FBI or a grand jury – or both – before cooperating with the government. Warren, 47, said he was guarding a police substation at the mall and armed with his own assault rifle when Glover and a friend, Bernard Calloway, pulled up in what appeared to be a stolen truck. Warren claimed Glover and Calloway ran toward a gate that would have given them access to the building and ignored his commands to stop. He said he thought he saw a gun in Glover's hand before he fired one shot at him from a second-floor balcony. But Warren's partner that day, Officer Linda Howard, testified Glover and Calloway weren't armed and didn't pose a threat. Calloway said he saw Glover leaning against the truck and lighting a cigarette, with his back facing the strip mall, just before he was shot. It wasn't the only time Warren discharged his weapon that day. Earlier in the morning, Warren had fired a warning shot at a man on a bicycle. Warren said he felt threatened by the man because he kept circling and looking up at him. After Warren shot Glover, a passing motorist, William Tanner, stopped and drove the wounded man, Calloway and Glover's brother, Edward King, to a school that members of the police department's SWAT team using in the storm's aftermath. Tanner and Calloway testified they were ordered out of the car at gunpoint, handcuffed and beaten by officers who ignored their pleas to help Glover. McRae, 49, admitted he drove Tanner's Chevrolet Malibu from the school to a nearby Mississippi River levee and set it on fire with Glover's body still in the back seat. McRae said it was his idea to burn the car and did it because he was weary of seeing rotting corpses after the storm. Another officer testified he saw McRae laughing after he set the fire. “We admitted he burned the car, because that's what he did,” his attorney, Frank DeSalvo, said after the verdict. “What he denied was that he intended to violate anybody's civil rights. Scheuermann, 48, said he was stunned when he saw McRae toss a flare into the front seat of the car and then shoot out the rear window to stoke the fire. “Thank goodness that we had 12 jurors with the courage to vote their conscience in a climate like this,” said Scheuermann's lawyer, Jeffrey Kearney. Steven Lemoine, Italiano's attorney, said his client was a “terrific” police officer who served the city with distinction for nearly four decades. “I think the jury saw him for who he is,” he said. McCabe's lawyers declined to comment. added by: TimALoftis

3 New Orleans Police Convicted In Post-Katrina Killing, Burning Of Body

NEW ORLEANS — A former New Orleans police officer was convicted Thursday of fatally shooting a man in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath and another officer was convicted of burning the man's body in a case that exposed one of the ugliest chapters in the police department's troubled history. A federal jury also convicted a third officer of writing a false report on the deadly shooting of 31-year-old Henry Glover, but two others were acquitted of charges stemming from the alleged cover-up. The jury of five men and seven women convicted former officer David Warren of manslaughter in the shooting death of 31-year-old Henry Glover outside a strip mall on Sept. 2, 2005. Prosecutors said Warren shot an unarmed man in the back. Officer Gregory McRae was convicted of burning Glover's body in a car. Lt. Dwayne Scheuermann was acquitted of that charge. Both were cleared of charges they beat the men who had brought the dying Glover to a makeshift police compound in search of help. Lt. Travis McCabe was convicted of writing a false report on the shooting and lying to the FBI and a grand jury. Lt. Robert Italiano was cleared of charges he submitted the false report and lied to the FBI. “This was a case that needed to be aired,” U.S. District Judge Lance Africk said after the verdicts were read aloud. Some of the officers hugged each other before they left the courtroom, while their relatives tried to console each other. Glover's relatives sobbed as they embraced each other. Rebecca Glover, Henry's aunt, said the verdict doesn't close the case for her. “This has been a long, anguishing time,” she said. “All of them should have been found guilty. They were all in on it.” Warren, who has been in custody since his indictment earlier this year, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison. Prosecutors asked Africk to jail McRae and McCabe while they await sentencing. The judge set a hearing Friday on that request. Warren's attorney, Julian Murray, said he planned to appeal. “I don't think people understand the split-second decisions police officers sometime have to make,” he said. A total of 20 current or former New Orleans police officers have been charged this year in a series of Justice Department civil rights investigations. The probe of Glover's death was the first of those cases to be tried. This isn't the first time federal authorities have tried to clean up the city's police department. The Justice Department launched a broad review of the force in the 1990s, when it was reeling from a string of lurid corruption cases. An officer, Antoinette Frank, was convicted of killing her patrol partner in a 1995 robbery. Another officer, Len Davis, was convicted of arranging the 1994 murder of Kim Groves, a woman who had filed a brutality complaint against him. All five of the officers charged in the Glover case testified during the trial, describing the grueling, dangerous conditions they endured after the Aug. 29, 2005 storm, when thousands of desperate people were trapped in the flooded city. Looting was rampant and bodies rotted on the streets for days because there was nowhere to take them, officers recalled. With lives on the line, the officers said they had no time to write reports or investigate anything but the most serious of crimes. U.S. Attorney Jim Letten said the jury rejected the notion that stress from Katrina was a defense for the officers' actions. “Tonight's verdict is a critical phase in the recovery and healing of this city, of the people of this region,” Letten said. The jury had to weigh the defendants' testimony against the words of several officers who admitted they initially lied to the FBI or a grand jury – or both – before cooperating with the government. Warren, 47, said he was guarding a police substation at the mall and armed with his own assault rifle when Glover and a friend, Bernard Calloway, pulled up in what appeared to be a stolen truck. Warren claimed Glover and Calloway ran toward a gate that would have given them access to the building and ignored his commands to stop. He said he thought he saw a gun in Glover's hand before he fired one shot at him from a second-floor balcony. But Warren's partner that day, Officer Linda Howard, testified Glover and Calloway weren't armed and didn't pose a threat. Calloway said he saw Glover leaning against the truck and lighting a cigarette, with his back facing the strip mall, just before he was shot. It wasn't the only time Warren discharged his weapon that day. Earlier in the morning, Warren had fired a warning shot at a man on a bicycle. Warren said he felt threatened by the man because he kept circling and looking up at him. After Warren shot Glover, a passing motorist, William Tanner, stopped and drove the wounded man, Calloway and Glover's brother, Edward King, to a school that members of the police department's SWAT team using in the storm's aftermath. Tanner and Calloway testified they were ordered out of the car at gunpoint, handcuffed and beaten by officers who ignored their pleas to help Glover. McRae, 49, admitted he drove Tanner's Chevrolet Malibu from the school to a nearby Mississippi River levee and set it on fire with Glover's body still in the back seat. McRae said it was his idea to burn the car and did it because he was weary of seeing rotting corpses after the storm. Another officer testified he saw McRae laughing after he set the fire. “We admitted he burned the car, because that's what he did,” his attorney, Frank DeSalvo, said after the verdict. “What he denied was that he intended to violate anybody's civil rights. Scheuermann, 48, said he was stunned when he saw McRae toss a flare into the front seat of the car and then shoot out the rear window to stoke the fire. “Thank goodness that we had 12 jurors with the courage to vote their conscience in a climate like this,” said Scheuermann's lawyer, Jeffrey Kearney. Steven Lemoine, Italiano's attorney, said his client was a “terrific” police officer who served the city with distinction for nearly four decades. “I think the jury saw him for who he is,” he said. McCabe's lawyers declined to comment. added by: TimALoftis

Mel Gibson Cashes Car Into Hill; No Alcohol Abused, Injuries Reported or Jews Insulted

Mel Gibson needs to get a grip … on the steering wheel. The actor was thankfully uninjured after getting into a car accident yesterday in Malibu. Vince Ramirez of the California Highway Patrol confirmed the crash. Reports say Mel was driving solo when he lost control of his 2008 Maserati at 8:35 p.m. and crashed it into a rocky hillside. He was apparently sober, too. “Mr. Gibson supplied all the pertinent information to the officers at the scene, gave a statement and received a ride home from a friend,” Ramirez said. “His vehicle was towed from the scene.” Poor Mel Gibson just can’t catch a break these days. Unlike his infamous 2006 DUI arrest , after which he swore at police, called a woman “sugar t!ts,” tried to break a pay phone and blamed Jews for all the world’s problems, “Driving under the influence is not suspected in this accident.” Mel is currently embroiled in a contentious custody battle with his ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva over their 9-month-old daughter Lucia. He is also being investigated for domestic violence, as she claims he hit her in a January 6 altercation. He may or may not have been doing Violet Kowal also.

Read more:
Mel Gibson Cashes Car Into Hill; No Alcohol Abused, Injuries Reported or Jews Insulted