Blue Lives Matter!! Cop dies where's the outrage??

spaminator

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Man charged in Georgia officer killing caught in car trunk
Russ Bynum, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Monday, August 15, 2016 08:38 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, August 15, 2016 08:44 PM EDT
SAVANNAH, Ga. -- A man charged in the weekend slaying of a police officer in rural Georgia was arrested early Monday in Florida, where sheriff's deputies found the suspect hiding in the trunk of his sister's car.
Authorities in Georgia say 24-year-old Royheem Delshawn Deeds fatally shot Eastman Patrol Officer Timothy Smith on Saturday night. Smith had responded to a 911 call of a suspicious person armed with a gun in a residential area of the rural city about 60 miles southeast of Macon.
"Our hearts are just broken," Lewis Smith, the father of the slain officer, said in a phone interview Monday, which would have been his son's 31st birthday.
"More than likely, Timothy would always give people the benefit of the doubt and try to warn them, just tell them to move on, you're scaring the neighbours a little bit," Lewis Smith said, adding that he hopes prosecutors seek the death penalty for Deeds. "This guy just executed Timothy."
Meanwhile, an aunt of Deeds' described him as "a good person" and said his arrest was "a plum shock."
"If he did that, I'm pretty sure he's sorry," said Annie Lee Harris, who acknowledged her nephew, has had legal problems in the past. "Yes, he has been in trouble, but not to the extent of taking somebody's life."
Harris said her family felt deeply sorry for the slain officer's loved ones.
Deputies in Nassau County, Florida, apprehended Deeds during a traffic stop about 1 a.m., said Nassau County Sheriff Bill Leeper.
Deeds was awaiting transport back to Georgia on Monday from the jail in Nassau County, located on the Georgia-Florida line about 160 miles from the scene of the shooting.
Leeper said his department received a tip overnight from U.S. marshals saying Deeds might be travelling in a gold Nissan Altima headed for Gainesville, Florida. He said one his deputies spotted the car early Monday travelling south on U.S. 1.
Deeds' sister, 22-year-old Franshawn Deeds, was driving the car and had one passenger, 32-year-old Jamil Marquis Mitchell, in the front seat beside her, the sheriff said.
"After the driver and passenger were detained, a search of the car revealed Royheem Deeds was hiding in the trunk of the vehicle," Leeper said.
Deeds' sister and Mitchell were charged with hindering the apprehension of a fugitive, Leeper said. He said all three had waived extradition back to Georgia. It was not immediately known if any of them had defence attorneys who could comment on the case.
Authorities released few details about the events that led to the shooting.
Georgia Bureau of Investigation spokesman Scott Dutton said Monday that a citizen of Eastman called 911 to report a suspicious person armed with a gun. Smith arrived on the scene about 9:30 p.m. Saturday.
"He pulls up, he sees who he thinks the call was about and starts to talk to him," Dutton said. "And things happened really quick."
Smith was shot once in the torso. He wasn't wearing body armour, Dutton said, though he had been issued an armoured vest.
It's unclear how authorities identified Deeds as a suspect. Smith wasn't wearing a body camera, Dutton said, but he had a dash camera mounted on his patrol car. The officer had also been talking on his radio. Smith was white. Deeds is black.
Dutton said there was no evidence the officer had been lured into an ambush by a bogus call for assistance.
"It was a legitimate call," Dutton said. "A citizen had reported suspicious activity, which is what (the officer) encountered."
Smith had been with the Eastman Police Department since 2011. He was also a father of three children -- two young boys and a 5-month-old daughter -- and was engaged to be married.
Smith followed his own father, an officer of 29 years, into law enforcement.
"I call him a country boy with a badge," Lewis Smith said of his son. "He worked seven days a week to provide for his family. There was no such thing as going out and partying or anything like that."
In addition to his full-time police job in Eastman, Smith worked part-time as an officer for the tiny city of Glenwood about 30 miles away. With a population of 730 people, Glenwood employs only two full-time police officers -- Chief Randy Rigdon and Lewis Smith, the slain officer's father.
Rigdon said Monday that Tim Smith also worked for him as a part-time officer, just a day or two each week when he wasn't on duty in Eastman.
"He was a quiet, humble guy," Rigdon said. "But he was stern in his abilities to keep the weak from being oppressed. He took his job seriously."
Man charged in Georgia officer killing caught in car trunk | World | News | Toro
 

spaminator

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Routine patrol turns to horror as car plows into Phoenix police
Paul Davenport, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, September 15, 2016 01:23 AM EDT | Updated: Thursday, September 15, 2016 01:27 AM EDT
PHOENIX — Three Phoenix police officers, including a rookie on his first night on patrol, were taking a break in front of a convenience store when they became the target of an attack.
A car barrelled across the parking lot toward the officers, slamming into two of them and smashing into the front of the store. An officer who escaped getting hit ran up to the car and pulled out the driver. A struggle ensued.
The rookie officer, reeling from a head injury after the careening car sent him flying through the air, managed to deploy a stun gun to disable the man.
The attack Tuesday left authorities searching for answers about the driver’s motivations and decrying it as an unprovoked assault on both police and public safety.
“I’ve never seen anything like that before,” Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery said Wednesday. “When someone targets a police officer, it places the entire community at risk.”
Two officers suffered serious injuries, but both have been released from the hospital.
A judge has ordered Marc LaQuon Payne to stay behind bars on suspicion of attempted first-degree murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, criminal damage and resisting arrest.
Payne, whom police said seemed impaired by drugs or alcohol, could face more charges when the results of a blood analysis come back, Sgt. Jonathan Howard said.
Payne didn’t have an attorney who could comment on the allegations when he appeared in court Tuesday night after being treated at a hospital.
Court documents describe Payne as a transient. He has not provided investigators with a motive, Howard said.
The attack comes during an especially violent year for police officers nationwide, including separate deadly attacks in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Dallas over the summer.
Phoenix Police Chief Joseph Yahner denounced the crash as a “violent, intentional act” in which officers were targeted.
Authorities released a store surveillance video that shows a vehicle backing out of a parking space, circling the parking lot and then speeding toward the officers. The rookie officer is thrown several feet in the air and hits the front windshield of the car.
Deputy County Attorney April Sponsel said during Tuesday’s brief court hearing that Payne should be jailed without bond because he attacked officers and posed a threat. She said the public and police needed to be protected “from individuals such as this, individuals who coldly attack officers.”
Payne did not speak in court other than giving his name in a tired-sounding voice when asked by the judge.
He slouched forward during the beginning of the hearing, resting his head on his left forearm. At one point, the judge asked him to “stand up, please,” and he did.
Court records indicate that Payne was placed on probation after pleading guilty in 1998 to aggravated assault in a 1992 incident.
A former public defender who represented Payne in that case said she didn’t recall him or the case.
Construction workers continue cleaning up in front of a QuickTrip store hours after a driver plowed into two police officers Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2016, in Phoenix. Police said Marc LaQuon Payne, 44, apparently drove his vehicle at the officers before hitting a patrol car and crashing into the front of the store around 2 a.m. Tuesday. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Routine patrol turns to horror as car plows into Phoenix police | World | News |
 

Tecumsehsbones

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“I’ve never seen anything like that before,” Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery said Wednesday. “When someone targets a police officer, it places the entire community at risk.”

No it doesn't. It places the cops at risk.

If you would quit lying, more people like me (pretty much anti-cop), would be willing to listen to what you have to say.
 

spaminator

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Man with 'superhuman strength' wearing only red underpants rams police car into mobile home
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Sunday, September 18, 2016 09:05 PM EDT | Updated: Sunday, September 18, 2016 09:21 PM EDT
BATON ROUGE, La. — Baton Rouge police say a man wearing only red underpants attacked officers with “superhuman strength,” got into a patrol car and tried to run over officers and rammed a mobile home off its blocks.
WBRZ-TV reports that according to an arrest report, 35-year-old Jeremy Wayne Saylor punched a beach-ball-sized dent in the car’s windshield, and shook officers off and got into the car despite four shocks from a stun gun.
Police spokesman L’Jean McKneely tells The Advocate that relatives had called police about 4:30 p.m. Saturday, saying Saylor was “tearing things up” after smoking synthetic marijuana called mojo.
He was arrested on charges of attempted murder of a police officer, resisting police, felony auto theft and damage to property.
It was not clear whether he had an attorney.
Jeremy Wayne Saylor.

Man with 'superhuman strength' wearing only red underpants rams police car into
 

spaminator

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Walmart bakers refuse to make 'Blue Lives Matter' cake
By Brad Hunter, 24 Hours
First posted: Monday, September 26, 2016 07:24 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, September 26, 2016 07:32 PM EDT
Three Walmart bakers figured they’d put the icing on a cake they considered politically incorrect.
A Georgia police officer — who was retiring after 25 years of service — had his daughter pick up his goodbye cake, which was meant to be iced with the words “Blue Lives Matter” and an American flag.
But one of the politically correct cake makers told her the design was racist and that none of them felt comfortable making the cake.
“I was so shocked,” the cop’s daughter, who asked for anonymity, told Fox News. “I didn’t know what to do or say or anything. I was trying not to lose my temper or make a scene.”
When she suggested another design with a thin blue line, that was a microaggression too.
“She said, ‘I don’t feel comfortable doing this,’” the daughter said. “I asked her, ‘Is there something wrong with cops?’”
She went elsewhere and the store manager apologized, offered to make the cake for free and gave her a $50 gift card. In the end, the manager made the cake himself.
“It irritates me that in Charlotte, N.C., the Walmart was looted and the cops were protecting them,” she told Fox News. “And you can’t make a cake for the people who are protecting you?”
Three Walmart bakers in Georgia refused to make a cake with the words 'Blue Lives Matter' written in icing on top. The bakers deemed the cake politically incorrect and didn't feel comfortable making the cake – which was meant for a retiring police officer. (Facebook Photo)

Walmart bakers refuse to make 'Blue Lives Matter' cake | World | News | Toronto
 

Tecumsehsbones

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A white officer said she was shot by a black man. Then her story started to unravel

By Cleve R. Wootson Jr. September 26


Just after midnight Sept. 13, Officer Sherry Hall radioed for help. She had just been injured in a gun battle with a man in a cul-de-sac in Jackson, Ga. He was 250 pounds, she said, mentally disturbed — and black.
Without warning, Hall said, the man stood up and fired his gun, shooting a round into her bullet-resistant vest. As she took cover, she said, he ran away.
It was, seemingly, another unprovoked attack on a law enforcement officer in a summer full of them. In July, officers were targeted and killed in Dallas. A week later, it happened again in Baton Rouge. The shooters claimed the bloodshed was retaliation for the killing of black men by white law enforcement officers.
Now, people were about to learn there was a cop-shooting black man on the loose in Jackson, a city of 5,000 where 41 percent of the people are black, according to the U.S. census.
Hall stoked the fear during an interview with a local CBS affiliate.
“For him to have such a disregard to human life really angers me and upsets me,” she said amid a manhunt for the man she had described. “If he’ll do this to an officer, how much more will he do to a citizen on the street.”
She was grateful for her training, she told the station, and relieved to make it home to her three children.
The shooting set residents on edge.
“It’s a little bit scary, so hopefully they catch him really soon,” Jackson resident Stacey Patterson told ABC-affiliated KLTV.
Shortly after, though, Hall’s story began to unravel.
During three interviews, she told investigators that she didn’t turn on her patrol cruiser’s dash cam or audio recording device, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
But investigators pored over the equipment — even reaching out to the manufacturer — and recovered video and audio from a hard drive.
They discovered numerous inconsistencies, including some with the physical evidence in the case.
They interviewed Hall again, pointing out things that didn’t add up.
“During this interview,” a GBI statement said, “Sherry Hall watched the video and at that time Hall stopped cooperating with the investigation.”
The probe shifted focus, from a still-unidentified 250-pound black man to the white officer who said she’d been shot.
Particularly damning: She hadn’t told investigators about a second gun that was issued to her by the Jackson Police Department on July 1.
Police haven’t said whether they believe Hall shot herself with the second gun, and they haven’t said what they believe motivated her. But they have said they weren’t looking for any suspects, and the city’s mayor called the incident a “ruse.”
On Sept. 23, the GBI obtained arrest warrants for Hall. She’s accused of making false statements, tampering with evidence, interfering with government property and violating her oath of office.
Her case is reminiscent of the 2015 death of Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz, a police officer in Fox Lake, Ill. Gliniewicz radioed that he was pursuing three possible suspects. A short time later, he was found dead of a gunshot wound. His case sparked a massive manhunt. But police say the killing was a ruse to cover up a suicide after Gliniewicz stole money from his own police force.
In Jackson, after Hall was charged, officials rushed to assure people that they weren’t in danger.
“There is no person out there with a gun shooting at our police officers,” Towaliga Judicial Circuit District Attorney Richard Milam said at a news conference, according to the Associated Press. “There is no person out there that needs to be found.”


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2016/09/26/a-white-officer-said-she-was-shot-by-a-black-man-then-her-story-started-to-unravel/?hpid=hp_no-name_hp-in-the-news%3Apage%2Fin-the-news&utm_term=.87ad4be879df


Support the police. Tough, dangerous job. Keeping us safe. Blue lives matter.
 

spaminator

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Police chief: 2 Palm Springs officers killed, 1 hurt; shooter at large
Robert Jablon And John Rogers , THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Saturday, October 08, 2016 07:54 PM EDT | Updated: Saturday, October 08, 2016 11:37 PM EDT
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. — Two Palm Springs police officers trying to resolve a family dispute were shot to death Saturday when a man they had been speaking calmly with suddenly pulled out a gun and opened fire on them, the city’s police chief told reporters.
A third officer was wounded. The shooter was not immediately apprehended.
“It was a simple family disturbance and he elected to open fire on a few of the guardians of the city,” police Chief Bryan Reyes, his voice breaking, told reporters.
The chief, near tears, identified the slain officers as Jose “Gil” Gilbert Vega and Lesley Zerebny.
Police said Zerebny recently returned to the force from maternity leave after giving birth to a now-4-month-old daughter. Vega, the father of eight, was a 35-year veteran who planned to retire in December. The wounded officer’s name was not released.
Reyes said the three officers were standing near the front door speaking with the man, “trying to negotiate with the suspect to just comply,” when he suddenly shot them.
He said the shooter was not apprehended and may still be in the house. He said Riverside County sheriff’s SWAT officers had the residence surrounded and were now leading the investigation.
Reyes also urged the media and others not to stream live video of police officers’ movements on social media, adding it could put them in danger.
“Understand that we’re actively looking for a cop murderer,” he said.
Dozens of law enforcement officers converged on the normally quiet residential neighbourhood in this desert resort city after the shooting. They sealed off several blocks and evacuated some residents.
Police Sgt. William Hutchinson said officers were warning people already inside their homes to stay there, lock their doors and not answer them until further notice.
Although Reyes didn’t identify the shooting suspect, he indicated police had had previous dealings with him.
A neighbour, Frances Serrano, told The Associated Press she called authorities after the father of the shooting suspect came to her house across the street and told her his son was “acting crazy.”
“He said his wife left because she was so scared of him,” Serrano said, adding the father warned that his son threatened to shoot police if they arrived.
She’d gone back inside her home before officers arrived, Serrano said, and a few minutes after they got there she heard gunfire. Moments later officers were knocking on her door, warning her to stay inside.
Serrano said the man police are looking for had been in jail at one time and had to wear a monitor on his ankle when he was first released. But she added that he had always been friendly and polite to her and her family.
“We never had any problems with him,” she said.
The shooting occurred just three days after a popular Los Angeles County sheriff’s sergeant was shot and killed in the high desert town of Lancaster.
Sgt. Steve Owen was answering a burglary call when sheriff’s officials say he was shot and wounded by a man who then stood over him and shot him four more times.
A paroled robber has been charged with murder.
Lancaster residents were organizing a candlelight memorial for Owen Saturday night.
Police chief: 2 Palm Springs officers killed, 1 hurt; shooter at large | World |
 

Cliffy

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Joshua Ford October 3 at 8:44am ·
Today I want to make a personal appeal to the officers guarding the North Dakota pipeline. The history of the Native Americans has always been one of struggle. Since the days of Christopher Columbus, they have struggled to teach us the value of nature. The value of the one place we all call home.
We as officers need to remember that struggle. We must also remember the struggle we face as officers today. As law enforcement officers we have the discretion to act. Over the years the laws have tightened their grip to control that discretion, we have in our day to day rolls as peace officers. We have become more para-military than friendly neighborhood officers. Its not your fault, much like myself I suspect you went through a boot camp like academy. Given a cruiser and a radio and never getting out of that cruiser unless your radio told you their was trouble. Rarely interacting with the best of society, it wasn't hard to make you feel danger around every corner.
Than 9/11 came and suddenly even the smallest towns like Melrose, Ma had M16's and shotguns in every cruiser. Armored vehicles were only a phone call away. We have to remember why we wanted to become officers. We have to remember to put people ahead of corporations. To put land before profit. You don't have to look any further than Flint Michigan to know, if that oil pipeline spills. Help and relief for the affected people won't be coming any time soon. How many of you, yourselves included will be effected when the pipeline ruptures.
Even you had to feel like you were in the wrong firing tear gas from moving vehicles. Cutting off the peaceful protestors in armored vehicles with ballistic shields and countless firearms directed at unarmed men, woman and children. You know its wrong, you know who you should be helping. Regardless of orders or detail pay. You're being used to inflict harm on people. People that need your help, now more than ever.
America needs solid officers that do more than what their ordered to do. We need peace officers that listen to their conscience and stand up for those in need. Not those that are needy, greedy and put the public's safety in jeopardy for their own interest.
https://www.facebook.com/JoshuaFordMass/?ref=bookmarks
 

spaminator

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Suspect in 2 fatal police shootings taken into custody
Robert Jablon And John Rogers , THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Saturday, October 08, 2016 07:54 PM EDT | Updated: Sunday, October 09, 2016 03:40 PM EDT
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. — In the minutes before three Palm Springs officers were shot, two fatally, the suspected gunman’s father told a neighbour his son was armed, “acting crazy” and wanted to shoot police.
John Felix, 26, was apprehended early Sunday after a lengthy standoff and faces charges including two counts of murder on a peace officer.
Police said Sunday that Felix emerged wearing soft body armour after police shot a chemical agent into the home where he was holed up for hours.
A neighbour, Frances Serrano, told The Associated Press that the suspect’s panicked father, Santos Felix, said his son, an admitted gang member, had a gun.
“My son is inside and we’re scared, he’s acting crazy,” Serrano said the older Felix told her. When it was suggested they call the police he said, “Yeah, he already knows they are coming, and he is going to shoot them.”
Serrano said she went back inside her house and within minutes police cars arrived and gunfire erupted.
Police said Felix suddenly pulled out a gun and opened fire on the officers who had responded to a family disturbance call Saturday afternoon at the home in a quiet neighbourhood of this desert resort city.
Palm Springs police Chief Bryan Reyes identified the slain officers as Jose “Gil” Gilbert Vega and Lesley Zerebny.
Zerebny, 27, had been with the department for about 18 months and recently returned from maternity leave after giving birth to a daughter. Vega, a married father of eight, was a 35-year veteran who planned to retire in December. He had been working overtime Saturday on his scheduled day off.
The wounded officer’s name was not released.
Police arrested Felix, who was taken to a hospital for treatment of injuries that did not appear to be life-threatening.
Reyes indicated police had had previous dealings with the suspect, but declined to elaborate.
Court records show Felix is a gang member who was previously sentenced to four years in prison in a failed murder plot in 2009. Documents cited by the Desert Sun newspaper (Palm Springs cop killer suspect had body armor, high-capacity magazines) reveal Felix was charged with attempted murder but pleaded down to assault with a firearm and admitted his gang connection.
Documents also show Felix was the subject of a forceful arrest three years ago at the same house where Saturday’s shootings occurred.
Riverside County SWAT officers quickly sealed off the residential neighbourhood as police evacuated some residents. They told others to stay inside their homes, keep their doors locked and not to open them for anyone.
As the lockdown continued, scores of police officers gathered at Palm Springs Desert Regional Medical Center to offer a sombre salute as the bodies of Zerebny and Vega were loaded into white hearses for transport to a coroner’s office.
It had been 54 years since an on-duty uniformed police officer was killed in Palm Springs, a city of 45,000 residents about 100 miles east of Los Angeles, known for its desert views, boutique hotels and golf courses.
In front of police headquarters, scores of local residents gathered to leave flowers, balloons and cards.
Vega had submitted his paperwork to retire at the end of the year after a long and decorated career, Reyes said.
“Here he is, 35 years in, still pushing a patrol car for our community to make it better — on a day he wasn’t even scheduled to work,” the chief said.
Reyes called Zerebny a “wonderful, young, dedicated female officer that pressed forward every day to make it better for everybody else.” She and her husband, a Riverside County sheriff’s deputy, were new parents to a four-month-old baby.
“I don’t even remember anything so vicious and cruel,” said Palm Springs resident Heidi Thompson. “These officers are responding to a domestic call for somebody in need that they don’t even know. They put their life on the line for us, the community. And they get gunned down? I don’t understand it.”
The shooting occurred just three days after a popular Los Angeles County sheriff’s sergeant was shot and killed in the high desert town of Lancaster.
Sgt. Steve Owen was answering a burglary call when sheriff’s officials say he was shot by a man who then stood over him and shot him four more times.
A paroled robber has been charged with murder.
Hundreds of residents held a candlelight vigil Saturday night in his honour.
Suspect in 2 fatal police shootings taken into custody | World | News | Toronto
 

spaminator

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Officers sitting in patrol cars killed in ambush-style attacks in Iowa: Police
Scott McFetridge, The Associated Press
First posted: Wednesday, November 02, 2016 06:54 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, November 02, 2016 07:51 AM EDT
DES MOINES, Iowa — Two Des Moines area police officers were shot to death early Wednesday in ambush-style attacks while they were sitting in their patrol cars, and police are searching for suspects, authorities said.
Officers responded to a report of shots fired at 1:06 a.m. and found an Urbandale Police Department officer who had been shot. Authorities from several agencies saturated the area after that shooting, and about 20 minutes later discovered that a Des Moines officer had been shot in a patrol car at an intersection, Des Moines Sgt. Paul Parizek said. The shootings happened about 2 miles (3 km) apart and both took place along main streets that cut through residential areas.
“There’s somebody out there shooting police officers. We hope to find him before somebody else gets hurt,” said Parizek, who stopped briefly during a news conference as he worked to control his emotions.
The shootings follow a spate of police killings, including ambushes of officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge, La. Five officers were killed in Dallas on July 7 and three were killed later that month in Baton Rouge.
Authorities in Iowa are developing suspect information but they have nothing that they are ready to share with the public, Parizek said. Officers are now conducting patrols in pairs for protection, he said.
“There is a clear and present danger to police officers,” Parizek said.
Parizek said he wouldn’t release more information about the shootings.
Urbandale Sgt. Chad Underwood said Urbandale officers are equipped with body cameras, but they don’t run constantly and it’s unclear whether there was video of the shootings.
Urbandale is a suburb of about 40,000 people in the Des Moines metro area with about 50 officers. Officials in Urbandale cancelled school for the day.
Des Moines has about 375 sworn officers.
Officers sitting in patrol cars killed in ambush-style attacks in Iowa: Police |
 

gopher

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Minnesota: Gopher State
Iowa Police Shooter a Confederate-Flag-Waving Racist


I woke up to the news this morning that two Iowa police offers were shot and killed overnight, ambush-style. As of 9am ET, the gunman was still on the loose. Predictably, the comments to any news story about this were disgusting, and many comments were aimed at blaming #BlackLivesMatter for the shootings.

Yet — it appears the suspect, Scott Michael Greene, who is now in custody — was hardly a #BLM adherent and is, in fact, a Confederate-flag waving white man who is aggrieved because he was told to stop waving his confederate flag in front of African Americans at a local football game.

13h
Shaun King ✔ @ShaunKing
Here's the man who ambushed two police officers. His name is Scott Michael Greene and I assure you he's NOT a #BlackLiveMatter activist. pic.twitter.com/51s7Ci8ACn
Follow
Shaun King ✔ @ShaunKing
Last month Scott Michael Greene who just killed 2 Iowa officers took a Confederate Flag to a football game & waved it in front of Black fans pic.twitter.com/rpLNBBsCnX
8:10 AM - 2 Nov 2016
View image on Twitter
2,671 2,671 Retweets 1,968 1,968 likes
The Washington Post has more on this:

One of the officers was fatally shot next to Urbandale High School. A video uploaded to YouTube last month by an account named Scott Greene was titled “Police Abuse, Civil Rights Violation at Urbandale High School” and appeared to show a person recording the footage arguing with police officers asking him to leave the area.

In the video, the man recording the footage, who is identified by one officer as Greene, is heard telling the police that he was assaulted and almost mugged while “peacefully protesting” at what appears to be a high school. An officer is later seen explaining that the Confederate battle flag he was waving violated the school’s code.
“In the current social climate that we’re in, when you fly a Confederate flag standing in front of several African American people, that’s going to cause a disturbance, whether you intended to or not,” the officer said. As a result, the officer said, this man was no longer allowed on the school’s property.

Another video posted by the same account showed a still image of a man holding a Confederate flag in what appears to be the stands at an athletic event.
And finally — as if we didn’t know where this was leading, this:

View image on Twitter
View image on Twitter
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Grant Rodgers ✔ @GrantMRodgers
Neighbor tells me that shooting suspect Scott Michael Greene put this Trump sign in his yard approx 2 weeks ago.
10:11 AM - 2 Nov 2016
2,146 2,146 Retweets 1,413 1,413 likes
I don’t have anything else to add except to say — sadly — that I am not surprised. Get out and vote people. Make calls from home to swing states. Canvass this weekend. Bury the orange menace utterly — it’s our only hope to tamp down some of this hatred.

Wednesday, Nov 2, 2016 · 12:06:11 PM CDT · RenaRF
Jersey Jon gave me a link to the 10+ minute video shot by Scott Michael Greene.




The slain officers have been identified. Des Moines PD Sgt. Anthony Beminio and Urbandale PD Officer Justin Martin.


Two Iowa officers slain by Scott Michael Greene.




more ... Iowa Police Shooter a Confederate-Flag-Waving Racist




Imagine the outcry if he had been black.
 

tay

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He didn't just hate cops....


The Des Moines Register on Wednesday reported that Greene was arrested and charged with first-degree harassment in 2014 when he threatened to kill a man in an apartment complex parking lot. Greene, who lived in the apartments, was accused of approaching a man and shining a flashlight in his eyes before calling the man “ni**er.”

“I will kill you, (expletive) kill you,” Greene said, the Register reported.

https://www.buzzfeed.com/tasneemnas...michael-greene?utm_term=.jnzRb5zY5#.vh67oEOLE