Friday, December 24, 2010

Rape victim arrested for refusing TSA pat down

Rape victim arrested for refusing TSA pat down

Rape victim arrested for refusing TSA pat down

  • The Alex Jones ChannelAlex Jones Show podcastPrison Planet TVInfowars.com TwitterAlex Jones' FacebookInfowars store

Eric W. Dolan
Raw Story
Friday, December 24, 2010

A 56-year-old woman who says she is a rape victim was arrested and banned from Austin-Bergstrom International Airport Wednesday after refusing to receive a pat down from a Transportation Security Agency (TSA) officer.

Claire Hirschkind could not receive a body scan because of a pacemaker-type device in her chest and was escorted to a female TSA officer to receive an enhanced pat down.

“I told them, ‘No, I’m not going to have my breasts felt,’ and she said, ‘Yes, you are,’” Hirschkind told KVUE.

(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)

Stock up for the Holidays with eFoodsDirect and get FREE Shipping!

After refusing to receive the enhanced pat down, she was arrested.

“The police actually pushed me to the floor, and handcuffed me,” she said. “I was crying by then. They drug me 25 yards across the floor in front of the whole security.”

Hirschkind said her constitutional rights were violated.

About 70 airports have put into use over 400 backscatter x-ray machines that can see beneath passengers’ clothing. Passengers who set off a metal detector or body scan machine or refuses to be scanned receive an invasive physical pat down.

Full story here.

Have You Heard The News? - Prison Planet.tv is Going Supernova! - Don't Miss Out! Get Your Subscription Today!

Police Misconduct Costs NYC Taxpayers Nearly $1B to Settle Claims

Monday, October 18, 2010

Police Misconduct Costs NYC Taxpayers Nearly $1B to Settle Claims


The increasing militarization of police has had profound social ramifications across the United States, as citizens increasingly feel threatened by those sworn to protect them.  Beyond the social fallout, a recent Associated Press investigation skims the surface of the financial impact of police excesses over the previous decade.  

In typical Associated Press misdirection, a video accompanies the article, which literally has nothing to do with what is written around it.  The original title of the article is ambiguous, "AP Investigation: Nearly $1B in NYC Police Payouts."  If one were only to watch the video, one would assume that the $1B somehow has been paid out in counterterrorism operations, as the video focuses on a "dirty bomb" patrol boat protecting the UN building.  Strange.  However, the article itself does possess a few kernels of truth.

According to the AP investigation into the NYPD:
Nearly $1 billion has been paid over the past decade to resolve claims against the nation's largest police department . . . the total spending outstrips that of other U.S. cities, though some smaller cities and departments also shell out tens of millions of dollars a year in payouts.
These payouts often are due to provable wrongdoing by individuals, yet ultimately fall on the taxpayer according to the report, as "officers themselves don't usually bear personal responsibility."  It is precisely this lack of personal responsibility which contributes to the overall impact on society.  There are countless examples of police who have been repeatedly cited for brutality and other ethics violations being protected by the "thin blue line" of the supposed police honor code that too often protects their fraternity above protecting the public.  


The AP investigation deflects the payouts as being "less than the cost of insurance," but misses the point that this growing problem threatens to destabilize an already weakened trust in police that has more to do with failed police training and testing requirements than it does the legal system or a "litigious" atmosphere where, "Some law firms have made it their business to sue the city."

The public has been hoodwinked to believe that an increasing number of violent encounters over non-violent offenses is due to the "heat of the moment" or some type of combat lingo more appropriate to foreign war-time environments.  What would people think if firemen responded to a house fire and instead of putting out the fire, came in with gasoline?  They would rightly think poor training, or psychopathic behavior.  It's a simplistic analogy, but accurate when one considers the AP's own example of police raining 50 bullets on a car carrying an unarmed man and his two friends following a bachelor party.  The justification?  The car didn't stop as ordered, and police "thought the men were armed."  That's it?  Proper hiring and training practices -- physical, emotional, intellectual, and cultural -- never would have permitted this to happen.  Police are supposed to be trained using standard "containment" exercises for both vehicles and domiciles specifically to identify who is armed and who is not.  This particular lapse cost the city (taxpayers) $7 million.  

A recent failed containment of psychopathic proportions just occurred in Phoenix, Arizona that perfectly illustrates both poor training and poor hiring practices.  Officer Richard Chrisman (cited previously for "disciplinary problems") and his partner responded to a domestic dispute.  Not minutes into the encounter, an unarmed man and his dog were both killed, after Chrisman allegedly shouted, "I don't need no warrant mother------."  Phoenix must now wait and see how their tax dollars will be applied to this barbarity.  

Now that police are being equipped with the lastest military gear, even better training is required to temper their new lethality.  As the economy continues to implode, and citizens wish to peaceably assemble and demonstrate their distaste for a wide range of political and economic policies, more high-tension police encounters are inevitable.  This goes far beyond the highlight case of NYC.  An entire YouTube channel is dedicated to Cops Out of Control, with video evidence of horrendous abuse. 

Citizens everywhere should engage their local police to tell them that they unequivocally support their courageous duty to public service, but will hold them personally accountable for any sign of brutality or misconduct.  For those who wish to be active, Citizen Review Boards are gaining support.  If it really is "a few bad apples" as they like to say, then it shouldn't be too difficult to identify and remove them.

The National Police Misconduct Feed is a great source to track daily reports, statistics, settlements, and pending cases.

3 comments:


RichardC said...
Elected officials in charge of police should consult a trustworthy psychologist to identify personality types likely to cost their jurisdictions money. The problem is cowardly men who are angry because they are cowards. They become cops so they can demand the respect they have never been given. When the desired respect is not forthcoming, they become even angrier. As cowards, they are most likely to attack those who are no physical threat to them. We all know cowards are reluctant to confront dangerous adversaries, as we saw at Columbine and VA Tech. The flip side of cowardice is unseemly pleasure in hurting the weak, which we see cops doing all too often on YouTube. The Rodney King video showed a big, strong man surrounded by a dozen cops all of whom were afraid to wrestle him into handcuffs, even twelve against one. Instead, several stood at arms length and hit him repeatedly with clubs. Afterward, one expressed his cowardly pleasure at the damage done to King's face. Without the video, it would have been a routine arrest. Cell phones today all have video. More and more cops will try to attack bystanders with cell phones, hurting many and suppressing some evidence but not all. The psychology is there; most of these people can be weeded out. The real solution is fewer cops. Enough cops to save you from a home invasion in three minutes will always be enough cops to beat our deaf grandmothers or shoot our mentally handicapped sons. We shall have to learn how to protect ourselves. If you don't like guns, maybe large dogs and razor wire. Cops are not our friends.
saltypig said...
"courageous duty to public service" please.
Activist said...
Thanks for the comments. It is easy to become cynical toward police when we see these highlight cases. The brutality and nonsensical violence is increasing, undoubtedly. The point is that there is roughly 10% of police who are an extreme threat. We need to weed these people out as best as possible. We need to demand that our local police take action. Many people are already too fear-stricken to even approach police. As for saltypig -- the intentions of most police are to be courageous and upstanding. Again, the headline stories certainly don't make it appear that way, and the system of enforcement certainly should be called to task for not doing their job in getting the best people they can. So, I respectfully disagree. I would agree, though, that police brutality and misconduct is one of the most repugnant offenses against society.

Police Brutality - all cases of police brutality world wide at one place !: police violence

Police Brutality - all cases of police brutality world wide at one place !: police violence

Police officer kicks the suspects in head and high fives with an other officer! | Police Brutality - all cases of police brutality world wide at one place !

Police officer kicks the suspects in head and high fives with an other officer! | Police Brutality - all cases of police brutality world wide at one place !


Police officer kicks the suspects in head and high fives with an other officer!
Labels: article, police violence, video


The dramatic car chase in Los Angeles ends with a policeman kicking suspect in the head.
A 23-year-old man, linked to a notorious street gang in Los Angeles, tried to run from the police.

The dramatic chase lasted about 30 minutes and took place in suburban El Monte and Whittier in the American metropolis.
After a violent crash with a parked car, 23-year-old man jump out of the car and continues the journey on foot. When he has run a few hundred meters he stopped by big fence. He decides to give up the escape attempt.

23-year-old lie down on grass with arms and legs out and wait for the police to come to arrest him.
The first policeman to arrive kicked the suspect's head. The second one that came hit the suspect with a flashlight several times.
After arresting and beating suspect, police officers give each other “high five”

According to police 23-year-old not to have been seriously injured in the incident.

Two Toledo police officers are caught on tape beating 14 year old boy | Police Brutality - all cases of police brutality world wide at one place !

Two Toledo police officers are caught on tape beating 14 year old boy | Police Brutality - all cases of police brutality world wide at one place !

Two Toledo police officers are caught on tape beating 14 year old boy
Labels: article, police violence, video
Two police officers of Toledo are caught on tape beating up a 14 year old boy Trevor Casey. Family of boy calls it brutality of police force maintaining the case obtains a national attention.

Mother of boy classified a complaint with interior matters today. The chief of police force says that the incident is being studied. Family of adolescence boy says that video speaks it for itself.
The video of telephone can or can not prove violence



A police force brings back states Friday evening to the houses of Whitlock of mark, Casey stopped in before a police car and made a dance. Rapport indicates that the police force saw Casey and three others strolling on somebody the 'porch of S and ordered them to leave.

The police force claims Casey was giving a kick and trying to break freely but they regained the order. The video shows leaders fighting with Casey in a corner.

Today, room of Stephen of activist of community, which 's also functioning for the municipal council, called this an injustice. It is not an exit of race but an exit of the injustice and abuse of power and police brutality

Trevor Casey may way about 120 pounds, if that. Yet, in the video footage it is clear that the two officers in question may way over 200 pounds...there is no justifiable reason why these officers conducted themselves in the manner that they did. Ward states, “This is beyond a tragedy. I understand the moral of the Toledo police may be low, and their stress levels elevated due to the recent layoffs. However, police are to protect and serve the citizens. This is another time in which the trust and respect between the police and citizens have been breached.”




See also: 15 year old girl brutally beat by cops Seattle, Washington Police

YouTube - Video shows police beating after U-Md. basketball game

YouTube - Video shows police beating after U-Md. basketball game: ""

Video of confrontation after U-Md. basketball game shows police beating
Labels: police violence, video
The Prince George's County prosecutors have dropped charges against two University of Maryland students they claimed struck mounted Park Police officers and their horses after a basketball game in March. A video shot by another student, meanwhile, shows police beating one of those students without apparent provocation.

Worst Police Misconduct Videos of 2010 – Reader’s Poll « Injustice Everywhere

Worst Police Misconduct Videos of 2010 – Reader’s Poll « Injustice Everywhere

Worst Police Misconduct Videos of 2010 – Reader’s Poll
Once again it’s time for our annual “Worst Police Misconduct Videos of the Year” reader’s poll. Here we post some of the more egregious, but not all, of the videos that were released in 2010 in association with claims of police misconduct. Of course, some of the incidents tied to these videos did not occur in 2010, but the videos for those reports weren’t released to the public until this year so they are included.

Each video is associated with a number and are listed in no specific order. At the end of the post is a poll where each visitor may select up to three of the videos that they consider the worst examples of police misconduct caught on video for the year. At the end of the voting period, midnight on New Years Eve of 2010, we will begin tallying the votes and present the five worst videos of the year in January.

(Note: Our list of the worst police misconduct videos of 2009 as selected by our readers is here.)

So, without further ado, here are the candidates…

VIDEO 1


November 11, 2010:
A Texas State trooper was caught on dashcam slamming a female motorist face-first into a concrete barrier while arresting her on suspicion of drunk driving after she called police to report an accident. Prior to slamming her into the wall the dashcam recorded him telling the woman “You’re fixing to get hurt, don’t make me put you on the ground, you understand?” The woman was never charged and the now-former trooper was sentenced to probation after convicted on a misdemeanor assault charge.

VIDEO 2

October 29, 2010:
A Fond du Lac Wisconsin police officer was caught on surveillance camera inside a jail holding area slamming a handcuffed mentally-ill detainee face-first into a table so hard it lifted the man’s legs off the ground and resulted in a gash that required stitches in his head. While the officer was suspended without pay for three days over the incident the man’s family claims that he suffered worse injuries than are being described and hasn’t been the same since the incident, describing him as a “walking vegetable”.

VIDEO 3

October 18, 2010:
An undercover Seattle Washington police officer is currently under investigation after a surveillance camera inside a convenience store captured him kick a 17-year-old boy in the crotch then repeatedly kick him in the face while it appeared as though he was attempting to cooperate. The officer claimed the boy was just involved in a drug buy bust that went wrong when the undercover officers were robbed by the suspects they tried to buy drugs from. However, as you watch the video, note how the two kids look surprised by the commotion outside and go out to see what’s happening… would someone who just ran from a botched robbery do that? Oddly, the police apparently didn’t suspend the officer pending investigation until they found out the video was going to air on the news.

VIDEO 4

October 18, 2010
The same Seattle Washington police officer shown kicking a compliant teenager in Video 3 then allegedly went outside and punched a man who was attempting to videotape what was happening. However, aside from a single report in the press, there was no other word on any investigation taking place regarding this incident. In fact, officials refused to even view the video which was sent to the press.

VIDEO 5

April 17, 2010:
Two Seattle Washington police officers are still the subject of an internal investigation after both county prosecutors and the city attorney refused to press charges against them for their roles in this video captured by a freelance photojournalist where a gang officer can be heard telling what turned out to be an innocent man that he would “beat the Mexican piss” out of him before grazing his face while stomping on his hand. Later a female officer can be seen stomping on the man’s leg. Officers later released the man but didn’t offer him medical treatment even though he seemed unsteady on his feet. A second investigation began on allegations that one local TV station, which refused to air the story, colluded with officers to keep misconduct reports out of the news. One of the officers was also implicated in another incident a week after this video came out where he’s accused of choking a handcuffed suspect in the back of his cruiser. No video of that exists since the officer failed to activate his in-cruiser dashcam as required by policy.

VIDEO 6




October 30, 2010
Two Miami Florida police officers are still suspended while under investigation over a cellphone video that made it’s way on YouTube showing an officer strike a man in or near his head while being held down by several other officers. That man, a youth services worker, was allegedly picked out of a crowd for now apparent reason and prosecutors were going to drop charges against him until the video went public. Then prosecutors moved ahead anyway and charged him with a stand-alone count of resisting arrest without violence for, according to his lawyer, trying to cover his head during the beating until he lost consciousness.
VIDEO 7

August 5, 2010:
A Kershaw County South Carolina deputy has been indicted on a federal civil rights charge over his use of excessive force when he was caught on jail surveillance cameras repeatedly beating a handcuffed detainee with a metal baton while another deputy watched and shoved the man back when he tried to get away from the blows. The man suffered a broken leg in the attack and the other deputy seen in the video was fired over the incident as well but no word on charges against him.

VIDEO 8

November 27, 2010:
Four Springfield Massachusetts police officers have been disciplined over their roles in a videotaped beating incident where officers held down an unarmed man while another repeatedly beat him with a flashlight on video captured by a nearby homeowner. One officer, who has been charged over the incident, has been fired while two others were suspended for 45 days and the fourth was suspended for 15. [0]

VIDEO 9

September 21, 2010:
A Summit County Ohio deputy has been suspended for 30 days over a videotaped incident where he slammed a handcuffed detainee against a wall then sent him head-first into an opposite wall before kicking him in the jail’s intake room. The deputy claims the man tried to headbutt him though the video seems to show a head movement that appears more incidental due to the man being pushed than something intentional. The sheriff attributed this incident, and others this year, to stress over recent layoffs. [0]

VIDEO 10

September 2010:
The police chief of Wister Oklahoma was caught on video slamming a 50-year-old woman into a wall then using a leg-sweep takedown on her, slamming her face onto the floor. The rough treatment left the woman with a black eye, bruised her ribs, and dislocated her knee. The incident apparently stemmed from the woman swearing at the chief when she went to complain about how the department was handling an investigation into an unspecified resident’s death. The chief charged her with using profanity in public and resisting arrest but no word on any adverse action suffered by the chief.

VIDEO 11

September 5, 2010:
Six Dallas Texas police officers were involved in this video showing officers chasing a man for riding his motorcycle on a sidewalk then beating him after forcing him off his bike with their police cruiser. One officer was charged with assault for striking the man 5 times with a baton and another for striking him with his fists and knee. A third officer was also charged with evidence tampering for turning his dashcam away from what was happening. One officer was heard on radio during the chase telling them to get in close and that he was going to beat this guy.

VIDEO 12

March 16, 2010:

Two Denver police officers are under investigation over a videotaped incident in March of 2010 where they detained a man who was walking his dog because he told a motorist that the officers had pulled over that he would testify on his behalf since he witnessed the driver stop when officers were citing him for failing to stop. However, once the man started to use his cell phone to take pictures officers took him to the ground and began to punch him while attempting to take his cell phone, all of which was caught on another bystander’s video recording.

VIDEO 13

April 4, 2009:
Two Denver Colorado police officers are still under investigation over a year after an incident that was caught on the police department’s own “HALO” cameras which showed officers take down and beat a man who was simply standing on a street corner and calling his father, a Pueblo County Sheriff’s Deputy, asking him what to do while police were roughly arresting his friend. The video contradicted police reports filed by the officers which tried to justify the beating and arrest but, a year later, department officials decided to only suspend the officers for a couple of days for lying on the report which sparked outrage and the eventual resignation of the Dept of Public Safety director.

VIDEO 14

June 29, 2010:
Two Marin County California deputies are the subject of a lawsuit filed by a 64-year-old man who was tasered three times in an incident captured on the taser’s built-in camera as shown above. The suit alleges that deputies barged into the man’s home after paramedics had already treated the man for a leg injury when he hurt himself in a fall. Cops were called because paramedics heard the man exclaim that he was in so much pain he would have shot himself if he had a gun and officers wanted to have him committed for being suicidal. He was charged with resisting arrest but those charges were dismissed later by a judge.

VIDEO 15

February 24, 2010:
Two Columbia Missouri police officers are being sued by a man who was tasered on dashcam video, shown above, about 30 seconds into what appears to be a typical traffic stop after he asked why he was being pulled over. He claims that officers then began to beat him off-camera before arresting him on resisting arrest charges that were later dismissed when the prosecutor couldn’t show how the man could have known why he was being arrested in the first place.

VIDEO 16

July 2008:
A New York NY police officer shown in this video footage brutally beating an Iraq war vet with a baton in the apartment building where the vet was staying with his mother was later acquitted of charges against him because the man he beat was too terrified to testify and could not be found before the trial. The video was kept from the public eye since 2008 until right before the trial this year.

VIDEO 17

February 11, 2010:
A Columbia Missouri SWAT team videotaped their raid in on a family’s home that was based on questionable information they received from a paid informant. That raid resulted in a family’s corgi and bull terrier being shot while a 7-year-old was nearby inside the home. The cops say they did the evening raid because they expected this guy to be some big dealer but all they found was a pipe with resin and a grinder. The couple was charged with simple possession and child endangerment but the raid sparked a civil rights lawsuit that is still pending as well as promised reforms from the department itself.

VIDEO 18

March 3, 2010:
At least four Prince George’s County Maryland police officers and two police commanders are the subject of ongoing federal and internal investigations into their actions in the above video and subsequent actions during the investigation into it. The video contradicted officer’s claims in reports that a student they beat during celebrations after a college basketball game had attacked a police horse. The video clearly showed he did nothing to provoke the attack and his subsequent arrest as well.

VIDEO 19

March 28, 2010:
A Streamwood Illinois police officer has been charged with aggravated battery and official misconduct for beating a motorist with his baton at least 15 times after he had tasered the man’s passenger and it was all caught on dashcam. The men he tasered and beat were unarmed and didn’t present a threat to the officer who is now on paid leave and may eventually face even more charges in this case.

VIDEO 20

November 5, 2010:
A South Bend Indiana police officer was suspended for 30 days without pay over what happened in this video. The officer was found to have violated departmental policies when he intentionally hit a suspect with his police cruiser, shattering his knee, while the man was fleeing on foot. The officer claimed he turned into the grass to avoid hitting the suspect but the video was found to have contradicted that claim.

VIDEO 21

March 24, 2010:
A Newark New Jersey police officer was suspended without pay and indicted for using excessive force and falsifying reports to cover it up after this video surveillance tape captured him assaulting a teenager at an apartment complex without justification. Three other officers present during the incident were reassigned while under investigation but no updates were available in regards to their status. Charges against the 15-year-old boy were dismissed.

VIDEO 22

February 29, 2009
A Carrollton Texas police officer is the subject of a federal civil rights lawsuit over a 2009 incident caught on dashcam video that shows him slamming a man against a car and then to the ground after the man informed him that he had a concealed weapon permit but wasn’t given a chance to show it to officers at the scene. He wasn’t arrested that day because he didn’t do anything wrong… the officers were investigating him on suspicion of stealing license plates but he was just a car salesman putting temp tags on a sold car.
However, when the victim went to file a complaint three weeks later he was arrested and charged with resisting arrest after an officer asked him if he really wanted to pursue this. Since then he claims cops have been intimidating him by parking at his home at night and giving him tickets for parking on the street.

VIDEO 23

July 18, 2009:
A West Valley Utah police officer is the subject of a lawsuit filed by a man claiming he was picked up and thrown to the ground face-first by the officer who stopped him for allegedly running a stop sign. Apparently the officer tailed him without pulling him over until he got to his girlfriend’s house and then, when he got out of his truck, the officer turned on his lights. The officer then walked up to his truck, shoved him inside of it, then dragged him back out to shoulder-toss him face-first into the pavement while holding his arms behind him so he couldn’t break the fall.

Select the worst police misconduct videos of 2010
Video 1
Video 2
Video 3
Video 4
Video 5
Video 6
Video 7
Video 8
Video 9
Video 10
Video 11
Video 12
Video 13
Video 14
Video 15
Video 16
Video 17
Video 18
Video 19
Video 20
Video 21
Video 22
Video 23

">

Please only vote for three entries. Voting ends at Midnight, December 31, 2010.