Stupid, Dumb and Just Plain Ignorant Cop Thread

spaminator

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Miami police shoot autistic man's caretaker as he lies in street
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, July 20, 2016 09:37 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, July 20, 2016 09:45 PM EDT
MIAMI -- Authorities say a Florida police officer shot and wounded an autistic man's caretaker following reports of a man threatening to shoot himself.
The Miami Herald reports that North Miami Assistant Police Chief Neal Cuevas says officers responded to the scene Monday and began giving orders to 47-year-old Charles Kinsey and his 23-year-old patient to lie on the ground. Kinsey lies down and tries to get his patient to comply. Cuevas says an officer then fired three times, striking Kinsey in the leg. No weapon was found.
Kinsey's attorney, Hilton Napoleon, provided a cellphone video to the Herald on Wednesday taken moments before the shooting. It shows Kinsey lying in the middle of the street with his hands up, asking the officers not to shoot him, while the autistic man sits next to him, yelling at him to "shut up."
Kinsey is black. Police haven't released the name or race of the officer who shot him.
Miami police shoot autistic man's caretaker as he lies in street | World | News
Cell phone video shows caretaker lying in the street before being shot by police | Miami Herald
 

Tecumsehsbones

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If he had just complied with the lawful orders of the police, he woulda been fine.

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

tay

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He looked threating in the video so I don't blame anyone for him getting shot....
 

Tecumsehsbones

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This is reported to be a photo of Charles Kinsey, the victim, in another setting:




He's no angel.
 

spaminator

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Blacks have 'violent tendencies,' white cop says after partner slams black woman to ground
Paul J. Weber, The Associated Press
First posted: Friday, July 22, 2016 10:18 AM EDT | Updated: Friday, July 22, 2016 05:37 PM EDT
AUSTIN, Texas -- A black Texas teacher thrown to the ground by a white officer during a traffic stop, and then told by another white officer on the way to jail that blacks have "violent tendencies," said Friday she is grateful the police chief has publicly apologized.
But Breaion King said Austin police still have culture changes to make and called on the U.S. to come together after patrol car video of her arrest again heightened national attention and tension over police treatment of black people.
Newly released footage of her June 15, 2015, arrest is the latest in a string of videos showing tense encounters between police and blacks across the country. The most charged run-ins in recent weeks have been fatal, setting off protests, police officers being fatally shot and President Barack Obama holding a televised town hall on race.
Editor's Note: The following video contains disturbing content.
Officer Bryan Richter nearly threw King into an adjacent truck in the parking lot of a Wendy's after pulling her over for going 15 mph over the speed limit around lunchtime. Following a struggle, King was handcuffed and driven to jail by Officer Patrick Spradlin, who told her that "I don't blame" whites for being afraid because of violence in the black community.
Both officers have been placed on desk duty and prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into Richter's actions during the stop.
"If something is wrong, everyone needs to be held accountable," King said. "So for me, I feel we're starting to take the necessary steps for us to be able to come together as a community and the nation."
King, an elementary school teacher, didn't file a complaint after her arrest and said Friday she didn't know she had that option at the time.
"I was embarrassed and I was ashamed and I did not know what I needed to do," King said. "So through everything, honestly, what I did was I waited. I prayed. ... And everything comes together when it's time."
Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo condemned both officers' actions and has called comments on the video "disturbing." He said he had been unaware of the stop or the video until the Austin American-Statesman obtained a copy and began asking about it, and was critical of his chain of command for not alerting him at the time of the arrest.
Acevedo said the investigation of the officers will include their conduct in the year since the incident. He said the traffic stop had been originally classified as a level three use of force, which Acevedo said means there was no serious injury or complaint.
In one of two videos, Spradlin is heard asking King, "Why are so many people afraid of black people?"
King replies that she is also trying to figure that out.
"I can give you a really good idea why it might be that way," he said. "Violent tendencies."
Spradlin goes on to say, "Some of them, because of their appearance and whatnot, some of them are very intimidating."
It is only a few moments into the traffic stop when Richter is heard in the video ordering King to "stop resisting" as he orders her out of the car. The angle of the video doesn't fully show King while she is inside the car.
Richter orders King to put her hands behind her back while the two struggle on the ground.
Richter has been a police officer since 2010 and Spradlin since 2001, according to Austin police. Listed phone numbers for the officers could not be found.
Acevedo said he reviewed the video Wednesday with black community leaders for nearly 3 1/2 hours. He said they included Fatima Mann, an activist with the Austin Justice Coalition, who said she didn't understand how no one in the department had previously raised concerns about the video.
"If that was a white woman, would he have yanked her out ... and slammed her on the ground? Most of us could say absolutely not," Mann said. "But for some reason, for some strange reason, when people look like me, we're more of a threat, and that means we get treated and thrown around as if we don't matter."
The Austin police union said in a statement that it understands the public's reaction to Richter's response and that Spradlin's comments were "wrong and not reflective of the values and beliefs of the men and women who serve this community."
Associated Press writer Will Weissert contributed to this report.
In this July 19, 2016 photo, Breaion King is overcome with emotion as she describes being pulled from her car and thrown to the ground by an Austin police officer during a traffic stop in 2015, during an interview held at her attorney, Erica Grigg's office in Austin, Texas. Patrol car video publicly released Thursday, July 21, 2016, shows a white Austin, Texas, police officer violently throwing King to the ground during a traffic stop, followed by another white officer telling her black people have "violent tendencies" and whites are justifiably afraid. (Rodolfo Gonzalez/Austin American-Statesman via AP)

Blacks have 'violent tendencies,' white cop says after partner slams black woman
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tay

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Former Bolingbrook police officer Drew Peterson was sentenced to 40 years in prison Friday for trying to hire someone to kill the prosecutor who helped to convict him in the murder of his third wife.

Peterson, 62, was convicted of trying to hire a fellow inmate’s uncle while in prison to kill Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow, who helped convict Peterson in 2012 of killing ex-wife Kathleen Savio eight years earlier. Prosecutors say Peterson believed that with Glasgow dead, he could win an appeal of his conviction.

He already was serving 38 years for murdering Savio, and his 40-year sentence in the murder-for-hire plot would begin after he completes that prison term.

Peterson’s fellow inmate, Antonio “Beast” Smith, wore a wire for prosecutors, and jurors heard hours of Smith’s recorded conversations with Peterson at Menard Correctional Center in November 2014. Smith testified last week that Peterson enlisted him to help kill Glasgow.

In one recording, Smith tells Peterson that he gave his uncle the go-ahead to kill Glasgow.

“OK, all right, I’m in,” Peterson, a former Bolingbrook police sergeant, responded. “From the first time we talked about it, there was no turning back.”

Savio’s death was initially deemed accidental. Glasgow reopened the case after the 2007 disappearance of Stacy Peterson, Peterson’s 23-year-old fourth wife.

Peterson was never charged in her disappearance but told the informant he worried that Glasgow would eventually do so.

“This was not merely a threat to one prosecutor,” Glasgow said in a statement Friday. “It was an attack on our entire criminal justice system by a notorious murderer who always felt he could act outside and above the law. Prosecutors across our state must have assurances that they are safe once these criminal enterprises are uncovered.

Drew Peterson Gets 40 Years In Glasgow Murder Plot « CBS Chicago
 

spaminator

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Former cop kills himself after police chase with wife's body in trunk
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Sunday, July 31, 2016 02:58 PM EDT | Updated: Sunday, July 31, 2016 03:03 PM EDT
NEWARK, N.J. -- Authorities say a former police officer killed himself after a chase with police that led state troopers to finding the body of the ex-cop's wife in his trunk.
New Jersey State police were notified Saturday night by police in Providence, Rhode Island, that Franklin Osgood was believed to be travelling on the New Jersey Turnpike.
They located Osgood's car, but he refused to pull over and eventually ran off the road.
Troopers found the 61-year-old Osgood with a self-inflicted gunshot wound when they approached the car. The body of 55-year-old Mary Jo Osgood was in the trunk.
Franklin Osgood was pronounced dead at an area hospital.
Providence police said at a news conference Sunday that Osgood's daughter had called them Saturday to say her father was missing and distraught.
Former cop kills himself after police chase with wife's body in trunk | World |
 

spaminator

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Cop fired after punching injured boy he ran off the road in fit of rage
Postmedia Network
First posted: Tuesday, August 02, 2016 04:13 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, August 02, 2016 04:21 PM EDT
MONTREAL -- A Montreal cop has been fired after pleading guilty to running a 17-year-old driver off the road in a fit of rage in 2011, then punching the injured boy.
Patrick Delsame, a 24-year veteran of the Surete du Quebec, became enraged at the teen driver who was weaving around traffic. Driving an unmarked police van on Hwy. 132 in St-Lambert, Delsame tailgated the car at high speed, chasing it down before ramming it from behind. The car slammed into a concrete wall.
The teen was injured inside his destroyed car when Delsame flashed his badge and punched the boy, witnesses said.
Delsame pleaded guilty to dangerous driving in 2013 and was fined $2,000.
An ethics committee said Delsame suffered from attention deficit disorder that made him vulnerable to impulsivity and rapid mood changes. The committee said he had decided on his own to discontinue a medication and to cut another in half.
Delsame did not challenge the dismissal.
Cop fired after punching injured boy he ran off the road in fit of rage | Canada
 

spaminator

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Elderly librarian killed by Florida officer during ‘shoot-don’t shoot’ exercise
Tamara Lush, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, August 10, 2016 10:47 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, August 10, 2016 07:50 PM EDT
PUNTA GORDA, Fla. -- A police "shoot/don't shoot" demonstration in Florida went shockingly awry when an officer shot and killed a 73-year-old former librarian with what police said was real ammunition used by mistake at an event designed to bring police and the public together.
Authorities didn't immediately say how a gun with a live round came to be used at Tuesday evening's demonstration, noting blank rounds are typically used in such classes. The officer has been placed on administrative leave, and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement is investigating.
"We were unaware that any live ammunition was available to the officer," Punta Gorda Police Chief Tom Lewis said at a news conference Wednesday. "The officer involved is grief stricken. We've got officers assigned to him to make sure he's psychologically stable."
Mary Knowlton, a well-known community volunteer, was shot after being randomly selected to take part in the role-playing scenario illustrating the split-second decisions an officer must make about firing. It was part of a popular citizens academy attended by 35 people, including her 75-year-old husband, and the police chief.
Her son, Steve Knowlton, said his father was "devastated."
The younger Knowlton said in an interview Wednesday at his parents' home that, on his mother's behalf, he was forgiving the officer who fired.
"There's too much hate in this world, in America, we always feel like we need revenge and it doesn't solve anything," he said. "I obviously can't say it's easy to forgive, but it needs to be done. She's watching me now."
Punta Gorda Police Lt. Katie Heck said officers in such demonstrations normally use "simunition guns," which are real-looking weapons that fire a non-lethal projectile with reduced force. But Knowlton was mistakenly struck with a live round, officials said.
Later Wednesday afternoon, Heck identified the officer as Lee Coel and said he has worked for the department since 2014. She said Coel frequently gave department presentations and tours, "specifically role-playing in these shoot/don't shoot scenarios."
The class put on by the Chamber of Commerce and the Punta Gorda police station, was just one stop during the weeks-long curriculum.
Officer Oscar Vasquez of the Jacksonville, Illinois Police Department, who is president of the National Citizens Police Academy Association, said he had never heard of anyone taking part in such courses being fatally shot. He said most departments do not use weapons in "shoot/don't shoot" scenarios that are capable of firing a live round.
"When we run scenarios, we will use starter pistols," Vasquez told The Associated Press. "You can't even put live ammunition in them."
Some departments use video simulators or other non-lethal devices, he said. Officers involved in most citizen academies don't typically even bring service weapons into classes, he added. Citizens are told beforehand that live weapons won't be used.
"We put them in the shoes of the officers so they can see, real time, the decisions we have to make and the time frame we have to make them."
With suspicions running high between police and many citizens in recent years, particularly in minority communities, Vasquez said, a death like the one in Punta Gorda is extremely unfortunate.
"It just breaks my heart. It's such a tragedy," he said.
Mary Knowlton attended the class with her husband and it was supposed to be "a fun night," her son said.
Steve Knowlton tearfully told reporters Wednesday that he used to tease his mother about how much she worked in retirement. She helped with the local Chamber of Commerce, was active in a program for at-risk kids, loved the library and spent hours there volunteering.
Mary Knowlton moved to Florida after living for years in the Twin Cities area of Minnesota.
Books and magazines lay scattered on tables of the home she shared in Florida with Gary, her husband of 55 years. The couple split their time between Minnesota and the small Gulf Coast community. She had two sons.
Steve said that his father hadn't yet been able to see his wife's body, more than 12 hours after the shooting.
"To see your wife shot and killed, and not be able to see her ..." Steve Knowlton said, his eyes filling with tears.
And yet, Knowlton said his mother would have wanted him to forgive the officer who pulled the trigger.
"I forgive him. My mom was very spiritual. She brought us up right," he said.
Carolyn Hartwigsen, of Edina, Minnesota, told The Associated Press she was a longtime friend of Knowlton, adding she loved books and sought to instil that in young readers.
"So much is on the internet now. But, books are so important to have in children's hands. That was important to her," Hartwigsen said.
Hartwigsen said Mary and her husband would come back to Minnesota periodically to visit.
"She was the salt of the earth, a beautiful soul and the kindest woman you would know," she said.
Elderly librarian killed by Florida officer during ‘shoot-don’t shoot’ exercise
 

spaminator

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Florida officer in police academy shooting was accused of using excessive force with police dog
Tamara Lush, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, August 11, 2016 12:24 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, August 11, 2016 08:53 PM EDT
MIRAMAR, Fla. -- The officer who shot and killed a 73-year-old retired librarian during a citizen academy "shoot/don't shoot" class resigned from his previous department shortly after two excessive force complaints were filed against him, according to records released Thursday.
One of the 2013 complaints filed with the Miramar Police Department against Officer Lee Coel was mostly unfounded, but a second one clearly showed that Coel pulled a handcuffed man from the back of his cruiser by the ankles and caused him to land hard on the pavement.
The man, Stennette Simpson, had been accused of marijuana possession. He told investigators that he had fallen asleep.
"By the time I was being pulled, I woke up and screaming at officer, 'What are you doing, officer? What are you doing, officer? What are you doing?" he told investigators. "By the time I know, he's pulling me, I hit my head coming down and hit my back on the floor."
Coel, 28, resigned from the Miramar department shortly after the complaint, following about 14 months on the job. He was hired about a year later by the Punta Gorda Police Department, where earlier this week he shot Mary Knowlton during an exercise designed to show citizens the split-second decisions police officers must make. Such exercises don't normally use live ammunition.
Punta Gorda Chief Tom Lewis said Thursday he is taking "full responsibility" for the shooting, which he witnessed Tuesday night. He expected the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to finish its investigation in about two to four weeks. Coel is on administrative leave.
In the other Miramar excessive force claim, suspect Benson Kinney claimed he almost suffocated in Coel's police car because the officer turned the heater on high and refused to roll down the windows. Kinney said he was handled roughly once at a police station and that Coel drove at excessively high rates of speed.
Investigators concluded that the allegations were unfounded except for the speeding, which they said topped out at 102 mph and could have placed both men in danger.
Coel, a native of Cooper City, Florida, played football at Simpson College in Iowa and intended to be a veterinarian, according to Miramar personnel files. But not long after graduating with a biology degree in 2010, Coel shifted gears and decided to become a police officer. He specifically hoped to become a K-9 officer.
During his training, other Miramar officers said Coel had "very strong command presence" and was able to take charge of crime scenes and arrests. One nagging problem was that Coel had a tendency to drive too fast and get lost on the way to calls, sometimes placing other officers waiting for him in danger, according to the records.
"Trainee gets turned around easily. This has been a major struggle," one superior officer wrote. "He is letting the stress get to him, which is causing him to make more mistakes."
A Punta Gorda lawyer said Wednesday that Coel shouldn't have been on the Punta Gorda force. Scott Weinberg is representing a man who said he was mauled by Coel's K-9 during an arrest in November. Weinberg took the man's case in June, and that's when he viewed Coel's dashcam video of the arrest and informed local media about the case.
"I told everyone that this officer was dangerous and he needed to be fired," said Weinberg, who didn't identify his client. "If he had been fired like he should have been when he ordered that dog to maul my client for a minute and 47 seconds, then this wouldn't have happened."
Punta Gorda, Fla., Police Chief Tom Lewis gestures as he speaks to the media at the Public Safety Complex Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2016, in Punta Gorda, Fla. Police say an officer accidentally shot a woman to death during a citizen's academy "shoot/don't shoot" exercise Tuesday evening. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Florida officer in police academy shooting was accused of using excessive force