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Cop Who Arrested an Innocent Family and Small Children Now Running for Sheriff

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Last year, the same department that murdered Elijah McClain made headlines again – this time for holding an innocent family at gunpoint and forcing them all to the ground due to their own ineptitude. The police were searching for a stolen motorbike with a single driver when they came across a whole innocent family in an SUV with a registration plate from another state. The fact that none of the policemen involved in that act of terror were prosecuted — despite committing obvious acts of terrorism against an innocent family by holding children aged 6-17 at gunpoint and pushing them to the ground — exemplifies why police officers can get away with such A January decision exonerated all the cops involved. Despite the fact that the 18th Judicial District District Attorney's Office described the event as "disturbing," they determined that the police "acted legally." "What happened to the innocent occupants is unacceptable and preventable, but that alone does not

A 27-year career cop admits that police officers are trained to fabricate reports and portray themselves as heroes.

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Prior to the advent of computers and body cameras, people were compelled to enter court hearings with the mindset that "it was my side of the story versus the police." Who do you think the jury will believe? " However, given the technological era in which we now live, the word of police personnel may be questioned. However, one former policeman argues that this is insufficient, stating that policemen are trained exactly how to falsify police records for misleading reasons. Thomas Nolan spent 27 years on the job as a policeman and claims he was not a very outstanding beat cop but was unmatched in his ability to write police reports. He was so skilled at phrasing police reports deftly that other officers inside the Boston Police Department sought his help with their own reporting. The Insider reports: He regularly advised his subordinates to include a brief list of keywords in their reports in order to portray themselves as the hero and the suspect — who may have been woun

Cops Raid Innocent Disabled Veteran's Home and Murder Him While He Slept — Lawsuit

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When the SWAT squad of the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department conducted a no-knock raid on the house of Don Clark Sr., a 63-year-old Army veteran, in February 2017, Clark was killed. Police immediately claimed that Clark had shot at them, and a subsequent search of the residence uncovered two pistols and a large quantity of drugs. Clark's family is suing four years later, saying he was unarmed and sleeping peacefully in his bed. Jerryl Christmas has been retained by the Clark family to defend them in legal action. The Free Thought Project interviewed Christmas to get a better understanding of how Mr. Clark was shot and murdered and made to seem to be a violent drug dealer. We hope that the lawsuit will allow us to fill out the story of how these drugs got to Don's home, but we do not trust the police narrative in this instance. Mr. Clark had previously served as a paratrooper and was wounded during his duty, forcing him to walk with a cane and walker. "He was diabeti

Cop is being held on suspicion of murdering his son and stuffing him into a hole in the wall.

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On June 28th, Latrice Banks, the wife of Eric G. Banks Jr., petitioned Court Ronald Karasic to grant a restraining order against the former United States Marine and current Baltimore police officer, but the judge declined. Dasan Jones (15) would be discovered dead less than two weeks later, and officer Banks would almost certainly now be charged with his murder. Banks had petitioned the court to safeguard her family from the officer, her husband, for alleged emotional abuse and stalking tendencies. Mrs. Banks was forced to share custody of her three children after being denied the court-ordered safeguards she requested. After being unable to reach Dason, who went by the moniker "DJ," on the phone, police were requested to check over him on Tuesday. Officer Banks was already suspended for an unknown departmental violation when police arrived at his Curtis Bay condominium on the 1400 block of Stoney Point Way. While police searched the home for DJ, Banks informed them that the

A Sadistic Cop Is Captured on Camera Stabbing a Handcuffed Man Multiple Times With a Key

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It's not the first time the Louisville Metropolitan Police Department has come under fire. The department has been implicated in almost every conceivable plan imaginable, from child sex rings to the mass murder of innocent individuals in their own homes, such as Breonna Taylor. Their flagrant disrespect for the law is obvious, which is why the next event is both startling and predictable. Officer Robert Jones of the LMPD appeared in court this week after his arrest for assaulting his girlfriend. While domestic violence among police officers is definitely notable, that is not the focus of this essay. Jones should have been jailed far sooner than he was when body camera footage captured an absolutely cruel behavior. Officer Jones' behavior was so unsettling that other cops turned him in after seeing it. Following the officer's arrest, an open records request was made for the body camera video showing Jones stabbing a handcuffed man in the ribs with a key. Jones gets arrested

“Hey, Wrong Car!” exclaims the narrator. Before holding an innocent man at gunpoint and cuffing him, cops admit they were wrong.

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The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) is under fire after a TikTok video seems to show police holding a guy at gunpoint and then admitting to one another that they had the incorrect suspect before beating him with a dangerous weapon and briefly kidnapping him. The films were posted in June by @lastcall702, a TikTok user. A similar scenario played out in a sequence of two TikTok videos in which at least six LVMPD squad vehicles and at least seven cops arrived on a traffic stop situation that was already developing. Officers started shouting orders to the driver from behind the open doors of their cars, weapons drawn and aimed in the direction of the automobile. He was told to toss his keys out the window, unbuckle his seatbelt, and exit the car with his back to the armed group who surrounded him. Around the same time, the driver was obeying the police' instructions, additional officers shouted from behind the gun-wielding ones, "Hey! It's the wrong vehicle. “

Murder charges against a man were dropped when forensics discovered a cop was shot by another cop.

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Darryl Borden was charged with two counts of attempted murder of a police officer and three counts of felonious assault of a cop. However, after ballistics tests by forensics, it was determined that the bullet that killed Jennifer Kilnapp had not come from Borden's gun but from his partner Bailey Gannon's service pistol. This revelation was made in April but not made public until this month. Authorities have yet to retract their story claiming Borden "pleaded guilty to shooting police officer several times" Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Michael Russo sentences Borden to a range of 7 to 10 years in prison. He pleaded guilty to a single count of attempted felonious assault of a police officer in May.