Police Brutality Activist Mysteriously Dies In Jail

Jinentonix

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 6, 2015
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Olympus Mons
lol...

Suicide ignored, cops still bad.
I'd like to know how they came to the conclusion it was merely suicide. I didn't know that hanging could only be self-inflicted. Seems like an awful lot of Black people and SJWs owe some Southerners a big ol' apology.


There was a young lady in the apartment complex I live in who supposedly hanged herself a few years back. Her death was ruled a suicide but a few of us had some serious doubts about that. Fortunately, at least one cop did too and wouldn't let it go. About a year after her death, her boyfriend was charged with homicide and ultimately convicted of murder.
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
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Why do you hate cops? They have a tough job and put their lives on the line every day for your safety.
firemen occasionally arrive in time to save something
cops?
a chief recently told his own CLIENTELE they should all have guns
(cause these days the cops won't be there to save anyone from trouble, they are just revenue collection)

so NO
cops are not automatically accorded respect
the are expected to EARN IT

http://www.bls.gov/iif/oshwc/cfoi/cftb0286.pdf
EVERYBODY PUTS THEIR LIFE ON THE LINE EVERY DAY bub
here is the recent stats on who dies on what job
(The top spot on the list goes to logging workers, who lost their lives at a rate of 127.8 per 100,000 full-time workers. In total, 62 loggers were killed on the job last year.)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jacquelynsmith/2013/08/22/americas-10-deadliest-jobs-2/
according to forbes
cops are not even in the top ten
those top spots all go to people like the one killed in the OP

I suspect the cops version will be just as factual as your assumption
 
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Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
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i wonder if the cops did the thing the dinos did on that other thread to her before the hangin?
(rhymes with grape)
Angstrom, you support that too?
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
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Police brutality activist, go out of their way to be annoying. It's like intentionally poking a bear, one day the bear snaps, and kills you, and I think you got what you deserve.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Regina, Saskatchewan
...and hope this does not happen to you, Canadian cops are getting as belligerent and stupid here. Think they are being trained south of the border.

Alberta and BC cops racked up a few killings this year so far...

Really? It's only 10 days into 2016 so far.....

....

The police slammed her head on the ground and dislocated her shoulder.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYim6pDZV0Y

.....

I'd like to see the few minutes leading up to where
this video started...
 

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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$1.9M settlement in lawsuit involving woman who died in Texas jail: Lawyer
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, September 15, 2016 12:53 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, September 15, 2016 03:54 PM EDT
CHICAGO — The mother of Sandra Bland, a black woman who died last summer in a Texas jail after a contentious traffic stop, has reached a $1.9 million settlement in her wrongful-death lawsuit, her attorney said Thursday.
Local officials in Texas insisted the agreement was not yet final, but the mother’s attorney said the deal was “absolute” and that the family’s lawsuit would be dismissed in several days.
Bland, who was from the Chicago area, died in her cell days after she was pulled over by a white Texas state trooper for a minor traffic offence. Her death was ruled a suicide, and Bland’s family later sued Waller County and the Texas Department of Public Safety.
The $1.9 million settlement includes a requirement that the jail have a nurse or emergency medical technician on duty 24 hours a day, the family’s Chicago-based attorney, Cannon Lambert, told The Associated Press in an interview at his office.
The jail must also install electronic sensors to ensure guards are checking on detainees, and the defendants agree to help push for statewide legislation in Bland’s name that would require training to ensure jail personnel are properly caring for inmates, Lambert said.
Bland’s mother, Geneva Reed-Veal, said those requirements beyond the monetary settlement are what really mattered to her. And she vowed to make sure they are carried out.
“Today is a victory for all mothers across the country,” she told the AP. “It was never just about Sandy. It was about all mothers who have lost their children unjustly to police brutality, to senseless gun violence.”
Waller County attorney Larry Simmons confirmed Thursday that a potential settlement had been reached but said it was not final. He also said the parties agreed in writing to keep the agreement confidential until it was complete, and the county intended “to honour this commitment.”
Simmons said lawyers on both sides were “still working through a few details” and that any settlement must be approved by county commissioners. The county “vigorously” denies any fault or wrongdoing in Bland’s death, he said, “and the settlement does not involve any such admissions.”
The agreement would cost the county “a modest $1,000 deductible” under its liability insurance, he said.
The Texas Department of Public Safety, also named as a defendant, released a statement saying it “has not settled litigation regarding Sandra Bland and is not a party to any agreements between the plaintiffs and Waller County defendants.”
Jeff Rensberger, a professor at the Houston College of Law, said the settlement showed that both the county and its insurance carrier wanted to “get this behind them.”
“The cost of the settlement is good risk to them as compared to the risk what a jury might do in this case,” he said.
The other provisions attached to the agreement, while unusual, are “not rare or unheard of,” particularly in a wrongful-death lawsuit against a government agency, Rensberger said.
“Part of the motivation for bringing wrongful-death suits in cases like this is for reform purposes as well as compensation,” he said. “So this goes to that reform purpose.”
It was unclear how much those extra requirements would cost to implement, but Lambert said the reforms would certainly benefit local authorities, too.
Bland, 28, was pulled over by a state trooper in Prairie View, northwest of Houston, for changing lanes without signalling. The stop grew confrontational, and the trooper, Brian Encinia, ordered her from the car before forcing her to the ground. She was taken into custody on a charge of assaulting a public servant but could not immediately come up with the $500 bail, according to investigators.
Video from the July 10, 2015, traffic stop shows Encinia drawing his stun gun and telling Bland, “I will light you up!” She can later be heard screaming off-camera that the trooper was about to break her wrists and complaining that he knocked her head into the ground. The video provoked national outrage and drew the attention of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Encinia was later fired and charged with a misdemeanour perjury charge stemming from the arrest. He has pleaded not guilty.
In an affidavit, Encinia said he removed Bland “from her vehicle to further conduct a safer traffic investigation,” but prosecutors said Waller County grand jurors found that statement to be false.
Bland, who attended Prairie View A&M University just outside Hempstead, was in the process of moving to Texas from the Chicago area to take a job at the school. Three days after her arrest, she was found hanging from a jail cell partition. A medical examiner ruled the death a suicide, and a grand jury declined to charge any sheriff’s officials or jailers.
In their lawsuit, Bland’s family contended jailers should have checked on her more frequently and that the county should have performed mental evaluations once she disclosed she had a history of attempting suicide.
The family’s complaint also contended that the trooper who arrested Bland falsified the assault allegation to take her into custody and that jail personnel failed to keep her safe. County officials said Bland was treated well while locked up and produced documents that showed she gave jail workers inconsistent information about whether she was suicidal.
———
Graczyk reported from Houston.
In this July 21, 2015 photo, Jeanette Williams places a bouquet of roses at a memorial for Sandra Bland near Prairie View A&M University, in Prairie View, Texas. The family of Bland, a black Chicago-area woman who died in a Texas jail after a contentious traffic stop last summer, has reached a settlement in their wrongful death lawsuit, the family's attorney told a Houston television Thursday, Sept. 15, 2016. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan, File)

$1.9M settlement in lawsuit involving woman who died in Texas jail: Lawyer | Wor