It’s not murder if they’re brown

Posted on June 22nd, 2008 by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/…

Khadija Hassan still shrouds her body in black, nearly three years after the deaths of her four sons. They were killed on Nov. 19, 2005, along with 20 other people in the deadliest documented case of U.S. troops killing civilians since the Vietnam War.

Eight Marines were charged in the case, but in the intervening years, criminal charges have been dismissed against six. A seventh Marine was acquitted. The residents of Haditha, after being told they could depend on U.S. justice, feel betrayed.

“We put our hopes in the law and in the courts and one after another they are found innocent,” said Yousef Aid Ahmed, the lone surviving brother in the family. “This is an organized crime.”

No one disputes that Marines killed 24 men, women and children in this town in four separate shootings that morning. Relatives said the attack was a massacre of innocent civilians that followed a roadside bomb that killed one Marine and injured two. Marines say they came under fire following the bomb.

Nonetheless, military prosecutors filed charges that ranged from murder to covering up a crime. Three Marines were relieved of their duties then, and U.S. Rep. John Murtha, a former Marine, famously called the incident “murder” on television.

One by one, the cases fell apart. American and Iraqi witnesses provided conflicting accounts. The investigation began months after the incident, and many Iraqis who could have testified were unable to travel to the United States. Furthermore, several Marines were granted immunity.

As Butler Shaffer over at LewRockwell.com/blog said: The acquittal of Marines for having killed 24 Iraqi civilians should come as no surprise. Do the Crips ever convict their fellow gang members for drive-by shootings that kill innocents?

NYPD cops found not guilty in Bell manslaughter case

Posted on April 25th, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: New York, New York City, police, police state, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 3 Comments »

http://www.cnn.com/…

A judge acquitted three New York Police Department detectives of all charges Friday morning in the shooting death of an unarmed man in a 50-bullet barrage, hours before he was to be married. Detectives Michael Oliver and Gescard Isnora were found not guilty of charges of manslaughter, assault and reckless endangerment in the death of Sean Bell, 23, and the wounding of two of his friends.

Detective Marc Cooper was acquitted of reckless endangerment.

Justice Arthur Cooperman said he found problems with the prosecution’s case. He said some prosecution witnesses contradicted themselves, and he cited prior convictions and incarcerations of witnesses.

He also cited the demeanor of some witnesses on the stand.

As the judge read his decision, Nicole Paultre Bell — Sean Bell’s fiancee before his death — ran from the courtroom, saying, “I’ve got to get out of here.”

The announcement immediately sparked anger among some in the crowd outside the courthouse, but the protests were generally orderly.

One woman shouted at a black police officer, “How can you be proud to wear that uniform? Stand down! Stop working for the masters!”

Patrick Lynch, president of the New York Police Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, said “there’s no winners, there’s no losers” in the case.

“We still have a death that occurred. We still have police officers that have to live with the fact that there was a death involved in their case,” Lynch said.

But, he added, the verdict assured police officers that they will be treated fairly in New York’s courts.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who has been advising Bell’s fiancee and family, left the courthouse about an hour after the verdict without making a public statement. He had called for calm Wednesday.

Bell, 23, was killed just before dawn on his wedding day, November 25, 2006. He and several friends were winding up an all-night bachelor party at the Kalua Club in Queens, a strip club that was under investigation by a NYPD undercover unit looking into complaints of guns, drugs and prostitution.

Undercover detectives were inside the club, and plainclothes officers were stationed outside.

Witnesses said that about 4 a.m., closing time, as Bell and his friends left the club, an argument broke out. Believing that one of Bell’s friends, Joseph Guzman, was going to get a gun from Bell’s car, one of the undercover detectives followed the men and called for backup.

What happened next was at the heart of the trial, prosecuted by the assistant district attorney in Queens.

Bell, Guzman and Trent Benefield got into the car, with Bell at the wheel. The detectives drew their weapons, said Guzman and Benefield, who testified that they never heard the plainclothes detectives identify themselves as police.

Bell was in a panic to get away from the armed men, his friends testified.

But the detectives thought Bell was trying to run down one of them, according to their lawyers, believed that their lives were in danger and started shooting.

In a frantic 911 call, police can be heard saying, “Shots fired. Undercover units involved.”

A total of 50 bullets were fired by five NYPD officers. Only three were charged with crimes.

Oliver, who reloaded his semiautomatic in the middle of the fray, fired 31 times, Isnora fired 11 times, and Cooper, whose leg was brushed by Bell’s moving car, fired four times, the NYPD said.

No gun was found near Bell or his friends.

Soon after his death, Bell’s fiancee, Nicole Paultre, legally changed her name to Nicole Paultre Bell. She is raising the couple’s two daughters, ages 5 and 1.

“I tell [them] that Daddy’s in heaven now,” she said. “He’s watching over us. He’s our guardian angel. He’s going to be here to protect us and make sure nothing happens to us.”

Detectives Endowment Association President Michael Palladino said forensic and scientific evidence presented during the seven-week trial contradicts the testimony of prosecution witnesses.

But Paultre Bell’s father, Lester Paultre, said, “For those naysayers who say the police was doing their job, they should imagine their child in that car being shot by the police for no reason.”

Paultre Bell, Guzman and Benefield have filed a wrongful-death lawsuit in federal court that has been stayed pending the outcome of the criminal trial. Guzman was shot 16 times, and four bullets, too dangerous to remove, remain in his body, according to his lawyer, Sanford Rubenstein.

Federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York have been monitoring the trial. In the event of an acquittal, it is likely authorities would conduct a review to determine whether there were any civil rights violations.

Another example of the thin blue line closing in to protect their own.  No one is claiming sovereign immunity but that’s effectively what’s happening here. If any other gun toting individual were to have done something like this they’d likely be found guilty of at least manslaughter. These guys weren’t even found guilty of reckless endangerment. Firing 31 times into a slow moving car seems pretty reckless to me as well as assault.

People are claiming racism. While two of the officers are black that has never stopped minority officers from profiling or joining in on racist behavior. I’ve no evidence that explicit racism was a component of this case but I have little doubt that implicit racism did and unfortunately there is little or nothing we can do about that.

Right now on CNN TV they are reporting about how a protest/rally has broken out outside the courthouse. Our race baiting friend Al Sharpton apparently is there. I can’t stand the man but he’s telling everyone to keep calm and for some reason some people like and listen to him so perhaps he will help keep the likely volatile environment under control. We don’t need more tragedy to result from this.

This shows again that they aren’t there to protect you, they are there to enforce the law. Good or bad. They have little concern for the real victims and the real results of their actions. They are a gang and they look out for their own at the expense of those who they claim to protect. As with any gang they must be fought. We should not give those who seek power a position in which to weld it.

SWAT member who murdered mother and maimed infant son charged with misdemeanors

Posted on March 26th, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: Ohio, SWAT, police, police state, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 4 Comments »

http://stopthedrugwar.org/…

Back in January, Sgt. Joseph Chavalia, a member of the Lima, Ohio, SWAT team shot and killed Tarika Wilson, 26, and shot and maimed her infant son, Sincere Wilson, as she held him in her arms as he and other SWAT team members executed a drug search warrant at the home Wilson shared with her boyfriend. The boyfriend was the object of the raid.

http://stopthedrugwar.org/files/limaswat1.gif
Police have presented no evidence that Wilson acted in a threatening manner as the SWAT team burst into her home.On Monday, prosecutors charged Chavalia with two misdemeanors — negligent homicide in the death of Wilson and negligent assault in the wounding of her child — that could see him spend a maximum of eight months in prison if convicted on both counts. Wilson’s relatives and activists, many of whom allege a pattern of discriminatory policing by the Lima police, were outraged.

graphic appearing on Lima SWAT team web site, removed after shooting

Lets here it for the war on drugs and sovereign immunity!! Possibly 8 whole months for murdering a woman by shooting through her child. Dad’s in jail, moms dead. Kid may end up in the state child care system. What’s the likelihood this kid ends up really screwed up?

Another “above the law” cop story

Posted on March 11th, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: Maryland, police, police state, , , , , , , , , ,

No matter what the cameras say, some drivers are refusing to pay dozens of $40 speeding fines. Who? Police officers.In the last eight months of 2007, Montgomery County’s new speed cameras recorded 224 cases in which police vehicles were recorded traveling more than 10 mph over the speed limit, according to department records.

Supervisors dismissed 76 of those citations after determining the officers were responding to calls or had valid reasons to break the speed limit.

But that left 148 who didn’t have that excuse, and about two-thirds of those citations haven’t been paid, said police Lt. Paul Starks.

The police union says officers shouldn’t pay because the citations are issued to the owner of a vehicle, in this case the county, and not to the driver.

Police Chief Thomas Manger doesn’t buy that argument.

“We are not above the law,” Manger said. “It is imperative that the police department hold itself to the same standards that we’re holding the public to.”

Manger said officers who continue to ignore citations might be disciplined.

“[M]ight be disciplined”, ”imperative that the police department hold itself to the same standards that we’re holding the public to.” = will continue to subvert the law as long as they aren’t caught again. How about instead of forcing people to pay for a lousy service you let the market decide? You could at least get rid of sovereign immunity and allow other agencies arrest and try government agents

FSP’s Liberty Forum Day Three

Posted on January 6th, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: Dave Ridley, Gardner Goldsmith, Glen Jacobs, Jim Babka, Nashua, New Hampshire, police, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 36 Comments »
  • 9:00AM Peymon Mottahedeh’s Live Free off the IRS Lies and Abuse. Not a real lecture. It was really an advertisement for his scam. I’ve read plenty of the arguments from the tax protesters. I’ve read the IRS’s responses to many of them. It’s all bogus. The safest and quickest way to end the federal income tax is to assume it’s all legit and get rid of it by lowering spending, getting rid of the federal income tax and IRS and amending out the 16th Amendment. It disappoints me that those in charge of getting speakers for this Liberty Forum got this guy. I wanted presentations not adverts for possible scams.
  • 10:30AM Jim Lark’s Knee-Jerk Libertarianism: A Cure for a Common Disease. It was a well spoken discussion on a common problem in the freedom movement and many other belief systems: poor messenger skills. He was very well spoken and very serious in getting freedom fighters to be better at getting libertarian ideas across. Try not to insult, be empathetic and try to not to convince people your right but give them the info to think about why you are right. Here is the audio from the speech: Jim Lark: Knee-jerk libertarianism
  • 1:00PM Barry Cooper of Never Get Busted. He has a bit of that sleazy salesman feel but not like Peymon Mottahedeh. He’s not a full libertarian (though he’s running on the Libertarian ticket in Texas District 31) but he has some good practical instructions on how to deal with traffic cops as a user of marijuana and his new movie Never Get Raided goes further including concealing the growing of marijuana and catalogs police tactics. Sounds interesting but I’m not motivated enough to purchase either movie.
  • 2:30PM Jim Babka from Downsize DC. Not sure why I attended this one. I already had met him in the elevator earlier that day. I’m subscribed to the Downsize Dispatch, I very regularly use their services to send messages to my representatives and I donate to them monthly. It was interesting none the less (he’s a good speaker so hearing things over again didn’t feel repetitive) and I got myself a bumper sticker. He presented The Onion’s Bullshit is Most Important Issue for 2008 Voters.
  • Glen Jacobs was in attendance at Babka’s presentation. After it was over xyz and I got a photo with him. I briefly talked with him about his contributions to the movement. Acknowledging that given his situation I understood why he was unable to publicly participate in the movement but appreciated his work under his pseudonym and that someone in his position (not to say that professional wrestler is widely looked up to but surely more than I, and he’s got more connections) was very valuable. He seemed genuinely thankful. While I have a guess as to who in the community he is I’ll leave it to you to find out.
  • 4:00PM F. Paul Wilson’s Awful Lonely at Times: Being a Libertarian from the 60’s On. Those who know me know I’m not much on reading fiction. I’ve never read any of his books nor did I know who he was till just a few months ago when I started listening to Gardner Goldsmith’s radio show. Gardner is a big fan and was ecstatic to be able to hear him speak and hang out. Mr. Wilson was very well spoken and unfortunately didn’t spend much time on his dealings with libertarianism in the 60’s and 70’s. Many there knew of his work and were fans so it’s understandable that he would also talk about his works and how he integrated libertarian ideas into them. Here is the audio of his speech: F. Paul Wilson
  • The dinner was alright. I actually preferred the buffet. xyz and I sat with Mike and Sayh(sp?) from the Manhattan Ron Paul Meetup group and a young freelance writer, Sam, who was at the Liberty Forum to get information on private currencies. He originally just wanted to talk with Bernard von NotHaus but decided that if he was going to make the long trip up from Brooklin he may as well check out the whole Liberty Forum. He’s not a libertarian but was very interested in what he was hearing. If I run across him tomorrow I’ll have to give him a copy of the latest Serf City. The keynote speaker was New Hampshire US Senator John Sununu. A good number of people were not all that thrilled that the Saturday keynote was a federal Republican politician. He was booed when he said we need taxes to pay for needed government. He was called out for voting for the original PATRIOT Act He was heckled to do a Q&A when he finished. Which he didn’t… he grabbed his things and left immediately after his speech was over.

Brazil unhappy with Menezes ruling

Posted on December 26th, 2007 by bile Categories and Tags: Independent Police Complaints Commission, police, police state, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://news.bbc.co.uk/…

Brazil’s government has expressed its “unhappiness” that no senior police officers involved in Jean Charles de Menezes’s shooting will be disciplined.

The Brazilian electrician was shot dead in 2005 by police who mistook him for a terrorist after the London bombings.

The independent police watchdog had cleared 11 of the 15 officers involved, and has now ruled the other four senior officers will face no further action.

They included commanding officer Deputy Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick.

A Brazilian government statement said: “The foreign ministry expresses its unhappiness with the decision of the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) which absolves four senior officers involved in the death of the Brazilian citizen Jean Charles de Menezes.”

A Met Police spokesman said the shooting was “a matter of deep regret”, but added: “We are pleased by this move forward and for these officers and their families who have faced much uncertainty.”

Last I had heard and posted on this was that the Metropolitan Police force was fined for putting people in danger but nothing was being done to those that took Mr. Menezes’ life. It looks like that will stay. I’ve not seen anything in this new article but I’m betting his family is not getting any sort of restitution. Hopefully the Brazilian government will continue to complain. Someone needs to take some responsibility for this.



Freedom Slate 08

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