Ferguson police execute an unarmed 17 yr old boy (Update: Ferguson police chief to resign 3/19)

bouncy

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Alex Jones is a devil, but that doesn't mean the information he brings forth is necessarily untrue. You have to separate the wheat from the chaff. Alex Jones knows his bread and butter is rednecks who hate Blacks, so he plays to that crowd. But again, if you can verify the info he brings forth outside of his site, then there is no reason to dismiss it.
How in the hell can he know what blacks are going to do? I highly doubt he is in the mix to find out what they are doing, or his people.

As far as other stuff he may say is true, it's still dangerous because he manipulates to keep you in suspense and fearful. He's full of shyt. I stopped listening to him years ago when i realized what he was about, and I feel much better, and can see what is really going on. Its like listening to him keeps you lost, I really don't know what it is.
 
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Foxworth Krowler
1 hour ago




If Alex wasn't trying to hype this and or Jew controlled he would call this what it is- CIA agents posing as rioters plan to attack Power Plants and white neighborhoods to try and take away american rights.
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NOpcBS
54 minutes ago




Question for blacks with knowledge of such behavior. Why is it that when something like that happens you riot and even target whites? You realize the whites you are attacking have NOTHING to do with such actions? Do you know that whites are disgusted as well? Not over the fact that a cop defended himself, but with the direction of our country. Given that situation, it's a clear cut case. It wasn't some POS pig killing a black teen who he claimed "was reaching for something". The dude just robbed and pushed around a female then goes on to completely disrespect, assault, and attempt to re-assault a cop. Where does ANY of that justify attacking innocent people, looting, or rioting? Please explain.
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QamYasharahla

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How in the hell can he know what blacks are going to do? I highly doubt he is in the mix to find out what they are doing, or his people.

As far as other stuff he may say is true, it's still dangerous because he manipulates to keep you in suspense and fearful. He's full of shyt. I stopped listening to him years ago when i realized what he was about, and I feel much better, and can see what is really going on. Its like listening to him keeps you lost, I really don't know what it is.

I don't disagree with you, but there's still the wheat and the chaff. Him acting like he knows what Blacks are going to do is just devil shyt to rouse up his listeners, but that's not what we can't verify as fact versus opinion. I used to listen to him years ago, but I think he really started trying to push the race angle when Machete came out and he was trying to insinuate Mexicans were going to try to kill white people which was very big around that time. He's always alluded to being a racist, but has only made it really obvious in the last 5-7 years maybe. Basically around the time Obama came to power.
 
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loyola llothta

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Ferguson police deleted e-mails and search questioned

Russ Ptacek, Special for KSDK 9:10 p.m. CST November 19, 2014


ST. LOUIS - For the past weeks, 5 On Your Side Investigates has been pouring through more than 2,000 pages of Sunshine Law requests concerning Ferguson, looking for information you haven't heard before.

Missouri has a public records law – the "Sunshine Law" -- so you can find out what public officials are doing – and how your tax dollars are being spent.

5 On Your Side is trying to examine what local officials were saying to each other in emails after the shooting in Ferguson.

The documents we've uncovered raise new questions about what has – and has not been released.

It's something concerned citizens have wondered about since the day Michael Brown died.

Would emails between Ferguson police and other officials shed any light on the shooting, the protests, law enforcement and National Guard reaction?

We reviewed copies of open records requests from reporters and private citizens across the country, and around the world, that flooded Ferguson in the days and weeks after the shooting.

Many of them asking for those emails.

But one request stands out, from a reporter whose name may forever be associated with Ferguson's open records searches, Jason Leopold.

"I wanted every officer's inbox to be searched," Leopold said in an interview with 5 On Your Side. "I had assumed all the email boxes were searched."

Leopold, with the international online news channel Vice News filed, an open records request asking for "any and all emails" police sent about Brown and the protests in the five weeks that followed.

He made national headlines when he had to pay $1200 for the search which produced seven email exchanges he published.

That's right, just seven emails, in more than a month.

When we asked about the city's search procedures, Ferguson's city manager issued a statement.

"The City has instructed the contractor to search all emails on the system," said Ferguson City Manager John Shaw. "Including deleted emails for the keywords provided by the requester."

But we started asking more questions when we discovered a report on the email search.

It's from Acumen Consulting, the St. Louis-based company the city hired to do the email search.

One line describes the search process.

"Per City of Ferguson policy, it is assumed at this time that no one has violated the 'no email deletions' policy," the document sent by Acumen to Ferguson says.

What's that mean? Two computer experts we consulted called it unusual.

"This does not appear to be a thorough search," said Minneapolis based cyber-security expert Mark Lanterman.

Lanterman says although the consultant may have searched for some deleted emails, the only comprehensive way to do a search is to look for deleted – and purged deleted - emails, too.

That's because even after you hit delete – and clean out your trash box – they sometimes survive deep in a computer's memory.

But if you check the email search contract, there is a section called "Assumptions and Conditions."

The "Assumptions and Conditions" clause from Acumen states: "It is our understanding that no one has intentionally deleted or purged email."

St. Louis computer expert Vinnie Troia says making an assumption like that is like putting blinders on the search, and in his professional opinion, the Ferguson email search was not complete.

"It isn't," Troia said. "As you're looking at a forensic process, the first thing you're looking at is deleted items."

No one knows for sure whether there were any deleted emails, but it raises the possibility that a hidden pool of them went undetected, a possibility Vice News' Leopold said Ferguson officials didn't explain, and that he didn't know until 5 On Your Side contacted him.

"No, no idea at all," Leopold said. "I'm absolutely suspicious about what was deleted in the aftermath of Michael Brown's death."

And when you read the consultant's report carefully, you discover even he thought additional searches could have been done.

"It is possible to perform a 'per computer deleted item search,'" the consultant told Ferguson officials it would "require 30 minutes per computer request."

The report goes on…

"Per our discussion regarding budget control, I have stopped the search at five hours and am presenting the results," Acumen said in its final report to Ferguson officials on the search.

That has the reporter who paid big bucks for what he thought was a complete search – wondering:

"I do believe there is a smoking gun out there someplace and it's likely in someone's trashbin," Leopold said. "I'm outraged, and I think the public should be as well."

We contacted the consultant, Acumen, multiple times trying to get clarification about all of this. No one responded, but no one has suggested the consultant is a fault.

Without a complete search, experts say there is no way to know whether there are any deleted emails.

To find out, 5 On Your Side Investigates filed an open records request for every deleted Ferguson email since August.

The city wants a down payment of $500 before they start. We'll let you know what we discover.

Source:

http://www.ksdk.com/story/news/local...oned/19304949/
 

loyola llothta

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Lawyer identifies St. Louis officer who killed VonDerrit Myers Jr.

ST. LOUIS • A lawyer for the family of VonDerrit Myers Jr., who was killed by an off-duty police officer, publicly disclosed the patrolman’s name this week and said his comments on social media show political and racial biases that reflect upon the shooting.

The officer’s name is listed on an evidence envelope that was inadvertently included with Myers’ body when it was delivered to the funeral home, said Jermaine Wooten, one of the family’s lawyers.

Police have not released the name, pending a “threat assessment.” The department declined to comment on the disclosure.

Brian Millikan, the lawyer representing the officer involved in the shooting, would not confirm or deny the name provided by Wooten — Jason H. Flanery — but the Post-Dispatch verified it independently.

Police said Myers, 18, was killed after firing at the officer. The family said witnesses told their investigator that Myers, who was black, had no weapon and died begging the white officer for his life.

Wooten noted online posts attributed to Flanery that call President Barack Obama “Nobama” and say that in a speech by Michelle Obama, “She looks drunk, high, and dumb as hell.” The lawyer said repeated disparaging remarks about blacks in Flanery’s postings reflected a “strong negatively biased view of African-Americans.”

He also cited Flanery’s online criticism of liberals and homosexuality. The lawyer complained that “right-wing conservatives” have not traditionally been “the friendliest” to people such as Myers.

Wooten said that photos on an Instagram site, showing Flanery’s Marine, police and SWAT training, belie the claim that Myers pulled a gun and fired three shots before the officer could respond.

The lawyer said the Myers family released the name out of frustration that the department did not, and in hopes of hearing from others who may have had negative encounters with Flanery.

Millikan, emphasizing that he was not acknowledging the identity of his client, responded: “I’ve said all along that this policeman has military experience and that’s one reason he’s alive.”

He continued, “The political view of the officer that was involved in this doesn’t change any of the facts that happened. Whether he’s a liberal or a conservative or a Whig or a Tea Party member, it doesn’t change what happened that evening. And that is: Myers had a gun and he used it and he tried to murder this policeman.”

Full results of the police investigation have not been revealed.

The Myers shooting happened in the 4100 block of Shaw Boulevard about 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8 as Flanery patrolled, off-duty but in uniform, for a private security company employed by a residents’ association. Officials said that he was driving a marked security car when he spotted Myers and two other young men who ran — and that Myers grabbed his waistband as if he had a gun.

Police said Myers fired several shots that missed and was killed by return fire. Officials said that gunshot residue indicated Myers had fired a gun, and that bullets recovered at the scene had been fired from the pistol found near him. Officials also said social media pictures show Myers posing previously with what appears to be the same gun.

Wooten said social media provided insight to Flanery as well.

He said online pictures showed “a guy who is actually in love with weaponry.” More problematic, Wooten said, are comments on YouTube videos. In those, Flanery criticizes liberals and posts comments such as, “Conservatives are better. At everything.”

Flanery’s Instagram account showed pictures of him in the Marines and a video of him in civilian clothes, firing a fully automatic rifle. He praises family and farm life and posted comments such as “runyourgunnotyourmo uth.” He also wrote, “I’ve been blessed with the ability to be exactly who I wanted to be when I grew up,” followed by the hashtags “lawman” and “Marines.”

Flanery, 32, on the force for six years, also posted comments on videos of police actions, including a shooting in New York. One comment: “And the moral of the story is ... if you shoot at men with guns they are going to shoot you back. And probably a lot.”

Wooten said, “That says to me, if someone has a gun ... he is going to continue to fire shots at that person until he is dead. Meaning if you fire one shot at me, I’ll fire 100 at you.”

The lawyer noted that Flanery was arrested on a weapons charge while he was in high school.

Court documents show that Flanery was charged with felony unlawful use of a weapon and later pleaded guilty of attempted unlawful use, a misdemeanor, and was fined $300 and ordered to take alcohol counseling.

According to a Chesterfield police report, Flanery was a student at Parkway West High School on March 22, 2001, when a teacher spotted someone throwing a beer can and cigarette out of a car. Police searched the vehicle and found a wooden baton and four unopened beer cans in the car, and Flanery admitted having two throwing knives in the glove compartment.

Wooten suggested that Flanery’s old case had “a very interesting parallel” to that of Myers, who faced his own weapons charge in June after a police chase in which a pistol was recovered.

“After paying the fine, (Flanery) moves on in his life,” Wooten said. But he said the encounter with Flanery “kind of shot down VonDerrit’s opportunity for redemption. We don’t know what this kid could have made of life.”

Millikan, the officer’s lawyer, reacted by saying, “If Myers wanted to turn his life around, first off, don’t carry a stolen gun, don’t carry it on the street ... don’t point it at the police and don’t fire it at the police. Had he done all those things, maybe he would have had a chance to turn his life around.”

Christine Byers of the Post-Dispatch contributed to this report

Source:
http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/c...d3090263a.html
 
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