Another brother just got killed by the cops..his GF documents it on Facebook Live #PhilandoCastile

CurrencyChase

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This is looking like its some systematic training that starts from the top. Someone needs to find out why these cops are so trigger happy against African Americans but uses tazers and sprays against white people who present a bigger threat in some cases. Watching that video and it looks like straight fear from the officer when all the guy was doing was following procedure and reached for his license. If we switch the guy that got shot with a white guy, im sure the results will not be the same. This is looking like some shock training that police officers go through or a mental evolution and fear of black people that is building in the subconscious of these officers..shyt is getting creepy as hell...RIP to that man..
 

audemarzz

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@unit321

Actually, the first police departments started in England with Sir Robert Peel. That's why London cops were called bobbies.


It would be a reach to tell all the black officers in police departments in the south that they are doing the work of slave masters. In Southern cities, the chief of police is black. You can check it out yourself.

Well let's nip the first point in the bud, of course you are right but I'm speaking in regards to United States policing, I don't know how you got the notion to bring up London policing with context of the situation but it's excused. Also am I correct in my reasoning that your finishing statement is with regards to the police chief being black? it's an argument I'll give you that but we also have a clear history of tokenism with blacks being put in positions with no actual influence, they are given these positions as a front to give the illusion of inclusion which is a result of integration.

You are free to contact your local police department to talk to any police officer or even the chief of police just to share your feelings and ask questions.

Thanks for the advice buddy:skip:I've already done as much it is actually worrying how many officers(in my personal experience) did not attain higher education most have military backgrounds or came straight out of high-school, but this is beside the point and should not be discussed beyond this point.

No, I don't agree with that. In my department, there were cops who got caught doing the wrong thing. This is after I left my department. This one dude took photos of a teen naked. He got investigated by Internal Affairs, went to court, lost his job, and is serving time in jail. Yeah, he screwed up. But I did not associate with that guy. And his actions do not reflect the other officers. Another cop was caught DUI. Again, it happened after I left. I knew him in passing. I think he didn't get charged, but he lost his job. Cops are people and their personal problems don't apply to all other cops in that department. If one guy has an alcohol problem, everyone doesn't have an alcohol problem.
If we wanted to go with your reasoning of roots are poisoned, if Ray Rice beat his girlfriend, then all black pro football players are poisoned and guilty of beating their wives or girlfriends. Does that sound right to you?

I was going to concede with you until you made the comment about the actions of one officer not reflecting poorly upon other officers, A unit is a team if one member of that team screws up a light is shined upon that whole unit.The job of a law official is very different from common jobs because you have to uphold a certain standard even when not in uniform, everything you do while off-duty still reflects on you because you choose to become a cop, if a off-duty cops injures someone off duty it will be reported that an off-duty cop was in an altercation versus a civilian was in an altercation, this is again because law officials are held to a certain standard, if one officer makes a mistake it will reflect poorly on the entire force, this is regardless of how you personally feel.

Well, high-risk offenders and low-risk offenders in the county jail were never grouped together. Actually, high-risk offenders were put in solitary confinement because they were high-risk. Maybe it's different in state penitentiary, but I didn't work in a state prison so I can't speak on that.

You entirely missed the point, I don't know if this was intentional or just exhaustion from responding to so many people, or maybe I need to make it much more clear. I'm not actually looking for a response about personal experience, I posted researched information and put forth a question, the question is what happens when low-risk offenders are around high-risk offenders?
 

CurrencyChase

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Seat belt on, little kid and his woman in the car and it's still kill on sight for us. These pigskins got to go


I'm ashamed at myself for feeling so helpless
camera is not going do anything to save your life if you're a black man..i think the bullet proof vest might be a good solution. they need to legalize that shyt for civilians. These cops shot and just get away 98% of the time..
 

Marco Zen

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He did have a gun, but he had a license for it and he told the fukkboi cop about it

He stated he had a permit he was just letting that piece of shyt officer before he took his license that he has one. She said he let the officer know he was reaching for his id and this fukkhead starts panicking and unloads on him:snoop:

He had his Registered gun on him and he told them

Oh ok.. Y'all talking about the Minnesota dude.
 

TooLazyToMakeUp1

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camera is not going do anything to save your life if you're a black man..i think the bullet proof vest might be a good solution. they need to legalize that shyt for civilians. These cops shot and just get away 98% of the time..

I'm not walking around in a bulletproof vest unless I'm preparing for all out combat everytime I leave the house
 

goatnole

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@unit321



Well let's nip the first point in the bud, of course you are right but I'm speaking in regards to United States policing, I don't know how you got the notion to bring up London policing with context of the situation but it's excused. Also am I correct in my reasoning that your finishing statement is with regards to the police chief being black? it's an argument I'll give you that but we also have a clear history of tokenism with blacks being put in positions with no actual influence, they are given these positions as a front to give the illusion of inclusion which is a result of integration.



Thanks for the advice buddy:skip:I've already done as much it is actually worrying how many officers(in my personal experience) did not attain higher education most have military backgrounds or came straight out of high-school, but this is beside the point and should not be discussed beyond this point.



I was going to concede with you until you made the comment about the actions of one officer not reflecting poorly upon other officers, A unit is a team if one member of that team screws up a light is shined upon that whole unit.The job of a law official is very different from common jobs because you have to uphold a certain standard even when not in uniform, everything you do while off-duty still reflects on you because you choose to become a cop, if a off-duty cops injures someone off duty it will be reported that an off-duty cop was in an altercation versus a civilian was in an altercation, this is again because law officials are held to a certain standard, if one officer makes a mistake it will reflect poorly on the entire force, this is regardless of how you personally feel.



You entirely missed the point, I don't know if this was intentional or just exhaustion from responding to so many people, or maybe I need to make it much more clear. I'm not actually looking for a response about personal experience, I posted researched information and put forth a question, the question is what happens when low-risk offenders are around high-risk offenders?
Peter Liang knows what he is doing.
 

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This is looking like its some systematic training that starts from the top. Someone needs to find out why these cops are so trigger happy against African Americans but uses tazers and sprays against white people who present a bigger threat in some cases. Watching that video and it looks like straight fear from the officer when all the guy was doing was following procedure and reached for his license. If we switch the guy that got shot with a white guy, im sure the results will not be the same. This is looking like some shock training that police officers go through or a mental evolution and fear of black people that is building in the subconscious of these officers..shyt is getting creepy as hell...RIP to that man..
Ain't no trainings gonna change the white supremacist and extremists
 

shutterguy

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:salute: Powerful speech she gave, this needs to be shown on the news. She from my area, all those cities she named are Cleveland areas.

:blessed: She made it, I would hug her like family if I see her out in the streets.



Black Ohio cop posts emotional Facebook vid about Alton Sterling

A black Ohio police officer said in an emotional Facebook Live video that she’s ashamed to be in the same company as the cops involved in the killing of Alton Sterling.

“How dare you stand next to me in the same uniform and murder somebody. How dare you...,” Nakia Jones said.

Jones, a police officer since 1996 who is the first black female officer to serve in the Warrensville Heights Police Department, said she considered quitting the force after viewing the video of Sterling’s death.

"It bothers me when I hear people say, ‘Y’all police officers this, y'all police officers that.' They put us in this negative category when I'm saying to myself, 'I'm not that type of police officer.'

KING: Don't try to make sense of police killing of Alton Sterling

“I know officers that are like me that would give their life for other people. So I'm looking at it, and it tore me up because I got to see what you all see. If I wasn't a police officer and I wasn't on the inside, I would be saying, 'Look at this racist stuff. Look at this.' And it hurt me.


Nakia Jones, an Ohio police officer, posted a strong video criticizing racist police officers for the shooting of Alton Sterling.
(NAKIA JONES/VIA FACEBOOK)
"If you are white and you're working in a black community and you are racist, you need to be ashamed of yourself," Jones said in the video. "You stood up there and took an oath. If this is not where you want to work, then you need to take your behind somewhere else."

Her seven-minute heart-wrenching reaction eclipsed 2 million views and has been shared more than 150,000 times on Facebook since it was posted to her page Wednesday evening.

Sterling, a 37-year old black man, was killed around 12:35 a.m. Tuesday in Baton Rouge, La. by two white cops, Blane Salamoni and Howie Lake II, who were responding to a 911 call of an armed man in a convenience store parking lot.

Alton Sterling killed by police after homeless man called 911

A pair of horrifying videos show the cops wrestle Sterling to down and pin him to the pavement.


Alton Sterling was killed Tuesday in Baton Rouge, La. in a confrontation with two cops.
“He’s got a gun,” one of the officers cries. One of the officers then draws his weapon and fires five shots. Sterling, who was armed but had his gun in his pocket, died moments later.

The Justice Department has opened a civil rights investigation into Sterling’s death, which has ignited protests in Baton Rouge.

Jones said, “I took an oath in East Cleveland that I would serve and protect my community by all costs, even if it meant I wouldn’t go home to my one-year-old daughter, and that’s what I did, and I did it with integrity and respect.”

Philando Castile shooting stirs social media outrage

“Put these guns down because we’re killing each other,” she said. “The reason why all this racist stuff keeps going on is because we’re divided. We’re killing each other, not standing together.”

Her video, posted at 5 p.m., went live four hours before the police killing of Philando Castile following a traffic stop in Minnesota. The aftermath of Castile's death was captured in a harrowing video livestreamed by his girlfriend Lavish Reynolds.
 
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