Showing posts with label acab. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acab. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

GOODNIGHT, FUCKERS #882: IT'S A BIRD, IT'S A PLANE, IT'S . . .

 . . . I don't know. But I'm pretty confused. More confused than the guy who thought Superman was a bird or a plane. Jeez, guy.


On my way home from work I saw a bunch of people looking up into the sky, and I wondered what they were looking at. If I still had my old Civic I could use the sunroof to find out, but in my Accord all I see is the ceiling. As I got closer to home, I saw a bunch of cop cars parking in the general vicinity of my home, and they were all getting out to look at the sky.


Goddammit, what if this is the day aliens finally show up, and these neighbors and cops are all looking at a flying saucer? Am I going to miss the aliens? That's bullshit! Or it could be a weird light show like the one in Day of the Triffids or Christmas with the Dead, so maybe me not being blind or a zombie, respectively, is good news.


I drove past my elementary school, and there were maybe four cops in the west parking lot looking up at the sky. When that many cops get together it's usually bad news for someone, possibly even me. And it made me think back to one of my previous jobs.


I was tech support for Call One, a telecom company. The receptionist quit without putting in her two weeks, and I was recruited to cover the front desk until they could get a replacement. And that took a lot of time.


But the groups of cops today made me think about the day that about 6-8 of them showed up at the office asking to see one of my coworkers. I was advised to not tell him that the cops were there to see him, and as they kept an eye on me, I was unable to warn him. When the City of Chicago sends that many cops to arrest you, they're really worried about something.


But the cops milled about, and the CEO's secretary came up to talk with them about what was going on. Later, when she was telling the story to someone else, she said I looked very nervous when the cops were here. That might have something to do with the fact that every time I've dealt with cops outside of my City of Elmhurst job, they were there specifically to make my life miserable, and it pleased me whenever I could turn that around on them. I would never gloat. You can't. But if you play dumb you can reverse it on them, and they won't do anything about it. Your mileage may vary, so don't do this unless you're sure of yourself.


But the real reason I was so nervous was because all of those cops were armed. Also, did I mention they were CPD? So yeah, they've probably had the chance to pull those guns, maybe even the chance to pull those triggers. Maybe the chance to pull those triggers while aiming those guns at someone.


I really, really don't like cops, especially groups of them. I consider a group to be more than 2 of them, although 2 are plenty dangerous as it is. I don't like being around armed people who are very likely to shoot people if they haven't already. So yeah, I wasn't exactly in the best of moods that morning.


They arrested my coworker, but whatever it was didn't stick. Have I mentioned that cops are objectively bad at their jobs?


Oh yeah, when I got home I checked the skies. I saw nothing. It wasn't a bird, it wasn't a plane, it wasn't even Superman. I feel like one of the guys from Ernest P. Worrell's family album special, the one who was always certain that the gambler had nothing. Which he did. And the skies held more of the same for me today.


Dammit. I better not have missed aliens.

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

GOODNIGHT, FUCKERS #837: ACAB, REVISITED

Because there's no such thing.

 

It's been a while since I wrote my ACAB piece, and I read another news article that makes me want to revisit it. I love stories that make cops look like the buffoons they are, but more importantly I value them because they're stories about cops FAILING TO MURDER SOMEONE. Any story where the intended murder victim of a police officer survives? I'm a happy guy.


Enter Gary Porter. He was already wanted on a felony charge, so imagine the pleasure of the police when they found him passed out in a chicken coop. (Chicken coop? I hear you ask. This happens in Maine. There's not much there aside from chicken coops and Stephen King monsters.)


So they found a suspect passed out in a chicken coop. One might think that being found in such a position would require a mental physician to evaluate you, and that was the plan. They arrested him and brought him back to the station, where he woke up, and the madness began.


While the cop stepped around the vehicle to get the suspect out, Porter, who may possibly be Captain Jack Sparrow in real life, managed to get the cuffs out from behind his back, got behind the wheel and drove away.


The articles all say that he then led them on a merry chase through rural Maine, but let's be real. All of Maine is rural. They could have been anywhere in the state. The point is, 11 cops and 5 law enforcement agencies got involved. All because of this guy they found passed out in a chicken coop. They set a trap for him. You know those things in the movies they deploy on the road when trying to destroy a fleeing suspect's tires? They did that to him, and he crashed into a ditch.


But wait! There's more! Captain Jack--er, Porter, got out of the car, still handcuffed and wearing a hospital robe, apparently, and GOT INTO ANOTHER COP CAR AND SPED OFF. The whole time those 11 cops were shooting at him. At this point it is worth mentioning that Porter IS NOT ARMED. So the cops naturally decided to empty their guns at an unarmed man who belongs in a mental institute. Murdering suspects is their go-to tactic, which is why I'm so happy when their victims escape BEING MURDERED.


Too bad he crashed again not too far away. The cops, as is their wont, emptied their guns into the vehicle. Miraculously Porter was only shot once, and it doesn't seem like it was that serious. It sounds like he was treated and released by the hospital in the same day. A spokesperson for the Maine State Police said, "Officers confronted Porter, and gunfire was exchanged." Funny word, that, "exchanged." If gunfire is being "exchanged," it means two parties are shooting at each other. Nice attempt to cover your ass, Maine. Nice try.


Interestingly enough, according to court records the reason they were looking for Porter was because things had not gone well in court due to him mumbling and falling asleep. The reason for that was his medication. So this guy, zoned out on medication, handcuffed and wearing nothing but a hospital gown made dunces out of 11 fucking cops. Not surprisingly, they went on "administrative leave." Which I'm sure translates to "get paid to stay at home." Cops are good at failing but not really failing. It turns out that this real-life Benny Hill skit is "the largest number of police officers to discharge their guns in a single incident in recent memory in [Maine]." That's fairly close to Vermont. Could it be that Super Troopers is based on a true story?


Indeed . . .

Thursday, February 29, 2024

GOODNIGHT, FUCKERS #805: ACAB PART 5

Uvalde.

 So much has been said about Uvalde that I'm not going to go over the points here. For once the police used the fear-for-my-life thing to get *out* of shooting someone. Bottom line: someone was killing children at a school, and the entire police force was too afraid to act. And anyone who had the courage to go in, like the parents? They made sure the parents could *not* get in.


Those police officers were painfully, objectively bad at their jobs. But we have two cases left to look at. One is pretty fucked up and the other would be comical under other circumstances.


Let's take a trip to Vallejo, CA, where badge bending was reported in 2014 and the report had not come to fruition until last year. They have star badges, not shields, although I'm sure they'll make the switch soon. The idea is, if you shoot someone, you bend a corner of your badge. Kind of like WWII pilots painting their planes with the insignia of those they shot down. It was reported to top cops in Vallejo, but guess who did nothing until a whistleblower revealed the practice to the world.


You're not gonna fucking believe the straw that broke the camel's back.


Willie McCoy looks like a criminal on paper, but when you realize that most of the charges against him in his life were dropped, he looks more and more like a citizen. Also remember: when cops kill someone illegally, the first thing they do when it comes to media is to portray that person as a bad guy. This is what they tried with McCoy. But we have to face facts. The way this turned out? It's fucked.


OK, yes, McCoy was initially suspicious in this case. He was probably on something, or maybe he was driving drunk. As someone who has driven drunk, I think that's what happened because he was at a Taco Bell drive-thru when he passed out. Taco Bell called 911 after attempting to get McCoy's attention to no avail.


Six cops show up. They draw their weapons before approaching the vehicle. They see he is passed out in the driver's seat, and they claimed he had a gun with the magazine half out. This gun did not show up on body cam footage, but a time honored tradition among cops is to drop a gun at the scene of the crime when it turns out that they fucked up and must cover their asses. I suspect this might be the case here mostly because the one charge against McCoy in his life that was not dropped was a weapons charge.


Even if it was McCoy's gun, the magazine was half out. Meaning that he *might* have had one in the chamber. At the very most, if he was alert and conscious, he would only be able to fire one shot, and that's provided he carries one in the chamber.


McCoy moves in his sleep, probably to scratch his shoulder. Another story says he jerked awake, and can you imagine the horror of waking up surrounded by cops at a Taco Bell drive-thru? But even so, jerking awake is just that.


It scared the police, and one officer said, "Put your hands up!" The police gave him a mere three seconds before opening fire on him.


They shot him FIFTY-FIVE FUCKING TIMES. And after they brutally murdered him, they again yelled at him to put his hands up.


After, the cops changed their story. They fucked up, and now they have to cover their asses. The gun was now fully loaded with an extended magazine. Funny how magic works. Yeah, no one else bought it, either. The six cops bent their badges, and that was the straw. One of the cops had a badge so bent that it curled up like a dead spider on his chest. They offered to get him a new badge--as he was being promoted--but he refused because he viewed it as a "badge of honor."


Now for the final story, and I'm sure you can guess what it is.







If you're wondering what the fuck this acorn thing is, here's the story. Three cops were called to investigate an incident where a woman's boyfriend *might* have stolen her car. They found him, cuffed him and put him in the back of a patrol car so they could search the vehicle they found him with. One of them approached the patrol car when an acorn fell on the vehicle.


The cop immediately took it for a gunshot. He shouted, "Shots fired!" multiple times, then hit the ground rolling like he was in an action movie, AND HE FIRED INTO THE PATROL VEHICLE. The other cops with him saw this and fired into the patrol vehicle, too.


Somehow the suspect didn't get injured, and that is a miracle in and of itself. He did say, though, "I'm damaged for life." They let him go, and the cop that started shooting in the first place had the decency to resign. So that one has a happy ending. But it could have gone a lot fucking worse.


The police are objectively bad at their jobs. They should not have them anymore.


Just a bunch of bad apples, right? Not enough to get rid of the good apples, too? Remember what I said when we started out?



So what do we do? First and foremost, if we must keep these psychopaths and cowards on our payroll, then we need a body cam system that works. That means that COPS CAN'T TURN OFF THEIR BODY CAMS. In fact, footage from those body cams should *not* go to the police. It should go to a third party, who releases these videos without being tampered with. There should be so many people working at this third party that it should be impossible to bribe them all.


And then the police union must be destroyed. Remember, it's not a real union. It's a tool to keep these cocksuckers patrolling the streets and beating the shit out of whoever they please and putting the screws to children who have no recourse. The union helps police get away with murder. Literally. In addition to this, no more moving bad cops to new departments. No more firings or resignations. These fuckers need to do PRISON TIME. They have broken their social contract to keep us safe, and as such must pay the consequences.


But I don't want to keep these dipshits and scumbags around. What's my solution?


We're stuck with the cops for a little while, but when we're done training the people to take over for them, we should be in good hands. Police should be highly trained. They supposedly are now, but if they were, would I be writing a five-fucking-part series on the subject? They need to be trained to maintain cool heads. They can't fly off the handle and, say, terrorize neurodivergent children.


The replacements should be trained to deescalate, not to be the escalator in the first place. They need an understanding of humanity, not just the distrust of the public that they have now. They need to understand their role is to prevent crime in the least violent way possible. They can use force, but it must be justified. You can't just beat society into a vision of a crime-free America. We will always have crime. That is not debatable. But if we continue using these lunatics as a means of protection, we will eventually reach a day when I'm not just one of the few voices in the wilderness shouting for the abolition of the police. I think on that day everyone will be on my side.


We can do better. We *must* do better.


All cops are bad. Abolish the police.

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

GOODNIGHT, FUCKERS #804: ACAB PART 4

One really big reason for ACAB.

 

Sorry about last week. The sickness came back for me. I'm holding it at bay for now, and for the first time in years I'm seeing outside-the-box suggestions from doctors, so I'm feeling a bit hopeful.


OK, let's get back into the horror show. We're going back to the Jackson, MS, region, to Senatobia. All the articles I read identified the underage child, and I'm not going to do that here. At any rate, he's a 10 year old boy. His mom left him in the car so she could go see her lawyer about something. She shouldn't have done that, not in this day and age, but this did not warrant what the police did.


The young boy had to go to the bathroom, but there were no public restrooms in the area. So he did what any boy would do: he took a piss out in the open. Yes, that is illegal, but remember that this is a 10 year old. Because an officer caught him in the act. The cop eventually found his mom, and they had an interaction that seemed pretty reasonable at first.


And then backup arrived. Let me state, in no uncertain terms, that this fucking cop called for backup because he was afraid he wouldn't be able to handle a 10 year old caught pissing in public. These cops showed up with the explicit intent of arresting this child. So they did, and they did so while he cried his eyes out. And when they got him to the PD, they put him in a jail cell. A JAIL CELL. MEANT FOR ADULTS.


There's some good news. The arresting officer was fired, and the mother is suing for $2M. The police chief had a few things to say, some reasonable, some collar-pullers:


The police chief issued a statement, saying the officer did not see a parent on the scene during the initial contact with the 10-year-old. The mother was found at a nearby business a short time later and told her son was going to get a youth court referral.

He went on to say taking the boy to the police station was a mistake.

“Under these circumstances, it was an error in judgement for us to transport the child to the police station since the mother was present at that time as a reasonable alternative,” he said.


Remember: the police always feel the need to be cruel to children. It gets their dicks hard, remember?


Let's head out to the west coast, to the LA Sheriff's Dept. Imagine this: you're trying to take care of your kid, and the father is an abusive asshole who shows up out of the blue to give you shit before beating said shit out of you. You call 911 for help because the police are the good guys, right? They're supposed to come save your life.


The deputies show up, and by this point you're holding a knife for your own protection. They take their guns out because they're about to tell their superiors that they were in fear for their lives. Get Out of Jail Free card.


And then she's standing next to the abusive guy, still holding the knife. A deputy chooses now to shoot the woman who called 911 for help. He fires several times and will die shortly thereafter. Even the abusive asshole is incredulous. He says, "No! Why did you shoot?!"


This is what happened to Niani Finlayson. Shot and killed in front of her 9 year old daughter. The case is still being investigated, so we don't have an ending. Yet. How much you wanna bet these cops skate on a murder charge?


I haven't mentioned the FBI yet, and they're not immune to ACAB. At least when they pull their shit, it's usually not to kill an unarmed man, for example. It's with pure greed in their hearts that they pull their greasy shit. In 2021 they raided the US Private Vaults in Beverly Hills. It's a safety deposit box company. They specialized in anonymity, so their business appealed to shady people. But also to people who couldn't get a box at their own bank. Or any number of reasons why someone would legally need a box.


The articles I read didn't pinpoint a reason for the raid, so I have no idea what they were supposed to be looking for. They took everything the company had, though. Every. Single. Box. Their prize?


The FBI seized millions of dollars in cash from the deposit boxes, plus a mix of jewelry, personal effects, and documents such as wills and prenuptial agreements.


Good thing they got those dangerous wills and prenuptial agreements off the streets. Who knows how many people they could have killed?


This is such a violation of the Fourth Amendment that the judge assigned to the case said, "It was those very abusive powers, after all, that lead to the adoption of the Fourth Amendment." Here's something else he said:


“If there remained any doubt regarding whether the government conducted a ‘criminal search or seizure,’” the 9th Circuit ruled, “that doubt is put to rest by the fact the government has already used some of the information from inside the boxes to obtain additional warrants to further its investigation and begin new ones.”


Holy shit. That's ACAB Shit 101. Illegally seize a bunch of shit while you were looking for just one thing, and then use that other shit to hunt down other people who do business with the bank. That is some greasy shit right there. The Bill of Rights is one of the most important things about this country, and yes, sometimes it can be difficult to uphold those rights, but goddammit, they're there. We have them. WE SHOULD NOT HAVE TO FEAR THE POLICE AND THEIR ILLEGAL ACTIVITIES.


OK, we're almost done. I don't usually post on Saturdays, but I don't want to throw my numbers off. I'll do the last part tomorrow. And next week we can go back to talking about goofy shit with the occasional serious column.

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

GOODNIGHT, FUCKERS #803: ACAB PART 3


 

So far in these stories people have been brutalized and traumatized, but they have survived. Let's take a look at someone who wasn't quite so lucky. In fact, all things considered, his luck was just like Verrill luck: always in and always bad.


Leonard Cure from Georgia was convicted in 2003 of armed robbery. One problem: he didn't do it. Yet he spent almost 20 years in prison paying for a crime he never committed. That's shit luck right there. Or is it? I searched around and couldn't find a lot of details about that arrest. I'm willing to bet that the arrest was full of bullshit, and that the cops framed him. But I can't say that for sure because I don't have enough info.


Regardless, he was set free in 2020. Fast forward to a few months ago and his encounter with a cop named Buck Aldridge. Aldridge pulled Cure over for speeding, and from the get-go Aldridge acted like a dick. He screamed at Cure, saying he was charging Cure with reckless driving. A little different from speeding, but in that area it seems that going faster than 100 mph automatically means you're being reckless. Which is bullshit, by the way. It is easy to drive 100 mph and not be reckless. I've done it many times and will do it again. But in that area of the country the bullshit stands.


Imagine doing time for nearly two decades for a crime you didn't commit, being released and having that conviction vacated, and then this asshole pulls you over, and instead of asking the age-old question all cops can't help but ask ("Do you know how fast you were driving?") he screamed in Cure's face about it. Right off the bat. He then demanded that Cure get out of the car.


Cure does. He obeys the command to put his hands on the hood. But then comes the command to put his hands behind his back to be handcuffed, and Cure does *not* obey. Would you? Once you're in the system, whether you're guilty or not, YOU ARE IN THE SYSTEM. YOU WILL ALWAYS HAVE THAT STRIKE AGAINST YOU UNTIL THE DAY YOU DIE. But in addition to that, doing that much time for committing no crime? That is traumatizing. Would you be so willing to go back in the system? Even if it's for reckless driving (which is really speeding, a offense punishable by a mere fine) instead of, say, armed robbery?


Cure doesn't want to go back in the system. He doesn't say anything. He doesn't fight back. He just refuses the command. Aldridge, instead of being reasonable and admitting that he's up to bullshit, shoves a taser in Cure's back.


Unlike JD from last night's GF, Cure is an adult. A strong adult. So instead of meekly allowing himself to be brutalized by a cop who just stepped out of the gray zone and into the fuck-you-I-get-to-kill-you-because-I'm-a-cop zone. As Cure fights back and actually manages to grab the cop's throat, Aldridge shoots Cure to death.


A lot of people are using the same argument for Cure as for Trayvon Martin. Cure (and Martin) were violent and needed to be killed. If you are attacked, you should be able to defend yourself even if it means killing the attacker. HOWEVER. When you, yourself, are the cause of that violence? Nope. Go directly to jail. Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200. In Zimmerman's case, he harassed a kid and harassed him and harassed him until Martin fought back, thus making it socially acceptable to kill him.


What do you do when you come upon a beehive in the wild? Personally, I'm inclined to walk away from it swiftly and not bother it in the slightest. Zimmerman (and Aldridge) chose to grab the beehive and shake it up like a snow globe and then kick it around a bit and then had the gall to act surprised when he got stung.


If someone fucked with a beehive like that, would you think that he's a good guy? Or would you believe that he deserved to get stung because he's an idiot and a piece of shit?


But even former police officer (current criminal justice professor) Thaddeus Johnson said that Aldridge fucked up from the get-go. "He escalated the situation with Mr. Cure. He has no control over his emotions." He said Aldridge deserved to be fired and added, "We have to hold officers to a higher standard even though they are human." I can think of no better summary for this series than that quote.


How much you wanna bet that Aldridge was a problem before this incident? Heh. No bet. Good choice. Because when he started out his law "enforcement" career he worked in another Georgia town where he was fired for use of excessive force THREE times. There aren't details about the first two, but for the third he assisted with a traffic stop. He had to keep an eye on a woman in the car. NOT arrest her. Just keep an eye on her once she's out of the vehicle. He picked her up and hurled her to the ground, then handcuffed her so he could, uh, keep an eye on her?


Her crime? Letting an unlicensed person drive her car. OH NO! Heaven forbid!


When he got fired for that? A few months later he was hired by the sheriff's department who would let him kill Leonard Cure. Because cops are a lot like child raping priests. You get caught raping a child? We'll just move you to another parish where they don't know about your proclivities. You get in trouble for roughing up a woman for letting someone without a drivers license drive her car? We'll get you in with another law enforcement agency.


And it's not even Aldridge's first incident with the sheriff! Aldridge chased after someone eluding him, and when the car crashed, he rushed to the vehicle and dragged out the driver so he could beat the shit out of him. As someone who has been in a car crash, I know what it's like to get hit in the face with an airbag. It stunned me, and I could not act within the first minute or so of the accident. If someone dragged me out of the car to beat the shit out of me, I wouldn't even think of fighting back. My brain needed to catch up to my body before I could so much as get out of the car. I imagine the victim felt much the same way.


And Aldridge isn't alone with the sheriff's dept. Six of his fellow officers in 2022 were indicted and fired for beating the shit out of people they already had in jail. And one motor incident, which is almost kind of funny if it wasn't so fucked up. Christine Newman is singled out for pulling the motorist over and, when the motorist refused to get out of the vehicle, Newman got her into cuffs and then slapped her and, the cherry on top, slammed the motorist's head into her patrol SUV. Why was she pulled over in the first place? She didn't come to a complete stop at a stop sign.


Two months later Newman was declared Deputy of the Month! She was fired a year later for "aggravated assault" and "violating her oath of office." There aren't details about this incident, though.


Let's move on from Georgia to Alabama, to a place called Reform (and what a collar-puller of a name!). Micah Washington survived his encounter, but according to his aunt, "[H]e's not the same. You can tell he's not the same."


Washington's car was by the side of the road, and he was changing a flat tire. That is the only thing he did to draw police attention to himself. The officer approached, wanting to know what was going on. Washington explained and then asked for help. "Are you here to help us?" You know. The "serve" part of "to serve and to protect."


"No, I am not," the officer said. She demanded to see his ID. He complied. She led him to her vehicle, handcuffed him and put him in the back. Safely detained. Washington could not harm anyone if he wanted to.


The officer chose that moment--when he was handcuffed and defenseless--to tase him. For good measure, she charged him with a bunch of bullshit like dealing fentanyl (where the fuck did that come from?) and obstruction of governmental operations (whatever the fuck that means) and resisting arrest (even though he complied every step of the way).


The officer is on leave right now. There is no word of any investigation into her behavior. Washington and his family are suing. I hope they win.


Let's head over to Charlotte, NC, where a couple smoking outside of Bojangles were approached by the police. Before going any further, it should be noted that cannabis is illegal in NC. The cops accused one of them of smoking weed. She denied it, saying it was a cigarette she legally bought at a smoke shop. It's not entirely true, in that it was not a cigarette. But it's not, strictly speaking, weed either. It was later tested and came up positive for THCa. Technically that's not illegal. It's hemp-derived, not cannabis derived. So yes, legal to have.


The officers then said they were going to arrest them. The couple wanted to know why, and the cops refused to tell them. 


It should be noted that the police don't have to tell you why you're being arrested. I don't know how that's fucking legal, but there you go.


Understandably they were reluctant to go with the police. Once you're in the system, YOU'RE IN THE SYSTEM FOR LIFE. Even if exonerated. So they resisted, and suddenly a lot of backup officers showed up to pile on. One in particular, Vincent Pistone, kicked the woman's leg 17 times, trying to hit a particularly painful pressure point. Even his superiors said the first three strikes worked. The other 14 were excessive as he continued kicking her while the others worked to handcuff her.


She broke the law. She deserves what she gets. Right?


Two things. One, it is impossible to go your entire life without breaking the law. Even if it's little shit like speeding or jaywalking or even not returning a library book. That last one is, indeed, a crime in IL. You can be prosecuted for that one. So don't get up on your high horse. I have never met someone who has never committed some kind of crime. Two, SHE DID NOT BREAK THE LAW. If you learn nothing else from this series, please know that even if she did break the law and that was a real cannabis joint, she did not deserve to be kicked in a pressure point 17 fucking times.


Thankfully the charges were dropped. Also, I'm sure Pistone was fired, right? Eh, about that. He got suspended for 40 hours (a mini vacation as a reward for violating someone's rights) and had to go through more training. HE SHOULD BE IN FUCKING PRISON. Vicki Foster, the assistant chief of the PD, had a few thoughts about her boys.


Vicki Foster added that even in the calmer moments, Pierre and Lee were resisting arrest. She said despite moments where it doesn’t look or sound like they are fighting officers, if a person isn’t answering their questions or doing what an officer asks, that is considered resisting.


And:


“At the end of the day, we always have to remember that if you assault an officer, it doesn’t matter what that is. When there is a smack, a push, you know, whatever that is, you now put yourself in a situation where his use of force his or her use of force is going to be justified,” Foster said.


I'm not saying that use of force is wrong. Sometimes it's called for. But maybe getting kicked in a pressure point 17 times for being merely suspected of smoking weed is a bit harsh, don't you think? And here's the chief of the PD with one final bullshit quote for you: "We're not robots. If there's an expectation that we'll always say and do the right things, then I think that's something that will never happen."


It's not often that the police admit to being objectively bad at their jobs, but there you go.


OK, one more story for the night. This one goes toward what the cops will do to make sure their arrest numbers look good. And it's not even in the contiguous states! We're heading out to Hawaii for this one.


Ammon Fepuleai was visiting Hawaii from American Samoa and was pulled into a DUI checkpoint by the cops. I think I've ranted and raved about how those should be illegal elsewhere, but I'm going to let that go for now because this is TOO FUCKING LONG. Once you get me started on police brutality, I am kind of longwinded.


ANYWAY. He was pulled into a DUI checkpoint. One of the cops flat out lied and said that he smelled alcohol. Here's the problem: Fepuleai doesn't drink. Ever. He told the officer this. Remember, the cops are trained to never trust you, and these cops were no different. They ran him through field sobriety tests, and then he blew 0.0 on the breathalyzer. 100% not a drunk driver.


Did the cops say alcohol? No, they really meant drugs. You're under arrest for "driving under the influence of an intoxicant."


Once they're on the way to the PD the cop turned off his body cam WHICH BAFFLES MY FUCKING MIND BECAUSE POLICE SHOULD *NOT* HAVE THAT ABILITY. I wonder how much money goes into making sure all officers have body cams so we can prove when they're breaking laws AND THEN THEY CAN JUST TURN THEM OFF?!?!?!?!?!


This guy turns his off and says to Fepuleai that he's guilty, so he should just save the time and not go through the drug tests. Remember, NEVER TRUST A COP EVER. Fepuleai never learned that lesson, so he agreed to skip the tests and let them say he's guilty. He was able to bail himself out with $500 and was on his way. When he got home to American Samoa he got notification that the charges were dropped due to lack of evidence, and he received his drivers license in the mail. What did he *not* get back? His $500 bail.


He says he should have never listened to that asshole. He said, "He shouldn't have given me that advice, and I hope they're not giving other innocent people the same advice."


A traffic attorney and former HPD officer named Jonathan Burge says he's heard from many other clients that this is exactly what the police are doing.


Sure, it's lo-fi corruption, but it's still corruption. And it's making criminals of innocent people.


The police are objectively bad at their jobs, but they are very good at making citizens into criminals on paper. Once you're in the system, you're there for life.


To be continued tomorrow night.

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

GOODNIGHT, FUCKERS #802: ACAB PART 2

All Cops Are Bastards?

 I fucking hate cop shows with a passion. There are a few exceptions. Usually comedies like Brooklyn Nine-Nine or The Job. But there is a serious cop show that I *do* like: The Shield. I contend that it's the cop show for people who hate cop shows. Who hates cop shows? People who know what the police are actually like instead of the soap opera most people see. The Shield is a great cop show because it shows them for what they really are: predators and criminals.


Am I exaggerating? Let's turn our attention to Jackson, Mississippi, to a li'l town called Rankin. A bit more than a year ago a resident called the cops because two Black males were seen living in the neighborhood and were acting "suspicious." We know what that means, and I know I said I would leave race out of it, but it's the instigator in this particular case. A white guy calls a white police force, and a group of white cops show up. They're known locally as the "Goon Squad." Doesn't have quite the same ring as Vic Mackey's Strike Team, but it's a contender.


How did the Goon Squad know to show up? Their leader, a guy named Middleton, reached out to his team and said they had "a mission." Does that sound like something a professional police officer should be saying?


So they kick the door down and find the two guys. What happens next is very important. I can't stress how important. But the two men COMPLIED WITH THE POLICE'S ORDERS. And shortly thereafter THEY WERE HANDCUFFED.


Now it's time for verbal abuse. The cops want to know where the drugs are. What drugs? you might be wondering. Good question. That's the first I've heard of it in this story, too. Eh, who cares? It's time for some scare tactics now. One of them fires his weapon out the back of the house and demands to know where the drugs are.


There are no drugs.


The taunting begins. I'm sure you can guess which word gets thrown around quite a bit here. And now it's time for the threats. They find a sex toy and a BB gun, and they threaten to use them against the two guys. The police make it very clear that rape is definitely on the table, here.


And now for the physical torture. They pour milk, booze and syrup all over them, and they force the two guys to drink it until they're bloated. They throw eggs at them until one of them probably realizes that they don't want their vehicles to get dirty. They order them to shower and change clothes. Then the two men are beaten with pieces of wood and a GODDAM SWORD and tased. Remember THEY WERE HANDCUFFED. They OBEYED THE POLICE.


And now for the main event. One of the cops grabs one of the guys and makes him kneel before him. The cop then puts his gun in the guy's mouth, probably tormenting him a little before pulling the trigger.


The chamber is empty.


I can see the cocky grin on that fucker's face as he racks the chamber and does the whole thing again. Except this time, unexpectedly, the gun fires. Don't worry. Our guy lives. It busts up his mouth and jaw, and the bullet exits the back of his neck, but he's all right.


The cops realize the deep shit they're in, so now it's time to cover their asses. What would Vic Mackey do? They burn all the evidence they can. They get the hard drive from the home surveillance system and chuck it in the creek. To make sure there were no questions later about why they were there, they plant a gun and some meth and planned on telling the world it was a drug raid. They even try to get their victims to go along with their cover story. They try to convince them that if they stick to that story, they'll be released from jail.


Would you believe that line of bullshit?


If there's anything I've learned in my life, it's this: DO NOT TRUST COPS. Ever. Even when you think they're telling the truth. ESPECIALLY THEN. Do not trust a cop ever. Even if they threaten you.


Keep in mind, these motherfuckers were called the Goon Squad BEFORE this incident. Turns out, they've been doing this shit for years going back to 2004. They were notorious for it. A lot of their raids resemble the one described above (except for that ending). They'd waterboard people. Choke them with lamp cords. Beat people with flashlights. And if you think that last one is silly, you've never held a cop's flashlight before. You could easily kill a guy with one. And they fucking loved their tasers:


At least 32 times over the past decade, Rankin deputies fired their Tasers more than five times in under an hour, activating them for at least 30 seconds in total — double the recommended limit. Experts in Taser use who reviewed the logs called these incidents highly suspicious.

“This is not typical Taser use,” said Seth Stoughton, faculty director of the Excellence in Policing & Public Safety program at the University of South Carolina. “There’s just no justification for that.”

This story has a . . . I'd hesitate to say a happy ending. After all that violence? Who could possibly be happy? They got at least some form of punishment, which I can't say for a lot of cops. If they didn't resign, they were fired. All of them. Personally, I'd be a lot happier if they did some time. The victims are suing them, and I can only hope they take the Goon Squad to the cleaners.


Just a few bad apples, eh? It's . . . odd that so many of them just came together in the same spot. It's almost as if . . . hear me out . . . they're all rotten to the core?


When you're supposed to stop crime, but instead you *commit* crime, that makes you objectively bad at your job. But let's switch gears a little and tell you about a neurodivergent eight year old in Wyoming. He's called JD because he's a minor, but remember what I said about cops and their need to be cruel to kids?


This one seems to still be under investigation, so I'm just going to say this is the alleged story.


JD eats his lunch every day in the principal's office as part of his specialized education plan. That day he'd been a bit rambunctious, and the principal and teacher were talking to him about maybe apologizing to the cashier in the lunchroom. The school resource officer was there and knew about the kid's disorders, which meant he also knew that deescalation is what JD needs when in trouble. This officer was trained in this, allegedly.


JD got up to leave, just like he did every day, but for some inexplicable reason this officer grabbed JD by the arm--against the administrative code in WY--and pinned the kid to the floor, slamming his face repeatedly into the tiles. No one knows why this happened. The principal and other staff did not request any help with anything. This fucking guy just flew off the handle for no reason and beat the shit out of a defenseless eight year old. An adult man put his entire weight on a 68 pound child. JD couldn't breathe.


Who else couldn't breathe?


JD begs to surrender, but the officer's response is batshit crazy: "No, it's all me! Do you understand me?! I should be taking you to jail!"


The principal called JD's dad to come pick him up, and when he got there he demanded to know why the officer laid hands on his boy. The officer said, "Because, as a law enforcement officer, that's my primary function."


Oh? Really? I thought it was to serve and to protect. Apparently the primary function of a police officer is to beat the shit out of neurodivergent kids. Got it.


Am I exaggerating? Was this officer acting within the bounds of the law? Then why did he erase the worst parts of his body cam footage? (And we'll talk about body cams again, probably in part 5.) Why did he violate JD"s private personal records at the school and use excerpts in his official report? Because he knew he was in deep shit, and now he was covering his ass. Just like the Goon Squad.


This officer was not punished. The department condoned his actions, calling them "appropriate and justified." He's being sued, and the results are not yet in. I hope he gets taken to the cleaners, too.


I don't know about you, but I've had my fill of horror stories for tonight. To be continued tomorrow.

Monday, February 19, 2024

GOODNIGHT, FUCKERS #801: ACAB PART 1

ACAB applies to McGruff, too. Sorry bud.

 In case you don't know, ACAB stands for All Cops Are Bad. And yes, I'm going to spend five nights this week explaining why I think this. Because I don't think Defund the Police goes far enough. No, if it were up to me the slogan would be Abolish the Police.


But! But! But! But what about . . . ? Relax. Take it easy. I'll address your points.


Let's start with my own experience. When I was a kid I was like everyone else. I believed the police were the good guys, the only people who could protect us from the bad guys. But as I grew older I lost faith in that incrementally. A huge blow came over the Rodney King beating. My faith in the police dropped drastically that day. But it kept dropping and dropping until I just can't find it in my heart to say there are any good cops. There are plenty who think they're good, plenty who others would say are good, but they're bad. The fucking lot of them.


I've been arrested once. I did a whole diary about it on this blog and other places (RIP MySpace), so I won't go into details. I spent most of the night in jail in Lisle until my grandparents got me out. Being in jail is not fun. I can't imagine what prison is like.


But that's not my only run-in with people who claim to uphold the law. I've been detained and harassed many times. One time I got a written warning from a cop who pulled me over for NOT speeding. Let me repeat that. I was NOT speeding, and that was why he pulled me over. (I would have been speeding, but I saw him, so I kept the needle between the speed limit and the grace period.) I got ticketed once for going through a stop sign when I came to a full stop at said stop sign. Hard enough that I felt myself jerk. They pulled me over because I was young and had my radio loud. Because that's what cops do when they have teenagers in their clutches. They *need* to be cruel, and what's anyone going to do about it? Are the kids going to tell their parents? Hey Mom, I got in trouble for tobacco possession, but this cop treated me like a dick, and I think my rights were violated. And where is that teenager going to get the money to hire a lawyer to sue?


In Elmhurst, my hometown, the cops' favorite pastime is fucking with underage kids. They thrive on it. Gets their dicks hard. And I know it for a fact. I wasn't always on the receiving end of the police. As a parts driver for the city, I drove them around often, and they liked to talk.


I feel certain that I've written about the time I was almost arrested for attempted murder with two of my friends. For jack fucking shit. We were young, we were loud. A warning would have sufficed. But no, they decided to make our lives miserable simply because we were young. I was 18, my friends were 19. There was alcohol in the apartment, but thankfully the lease had my friend's dad's name on it, so it wasn't our booze, officer. I remember the vehemence the cops had for us when we said we weren't drinking. And we weren't. I hadn't yet had my first drink as an adult. But they threatened and cajoled us because we were young, and they felt it was their right.


One of us unfortunately had a warrant out for his arrest, so their bullshit bore fruit. That's why they fuck with so many people. They're looking for that goddam fruit, and they want to skip finding an actual reasonable cause.


But these are minor grievances compared to what the cops do to other people. I'm going to tell you about some of those people over the course of this week. You'll be horrified by the crimes these motherfuckers commit. CRIMES. Lest ye forget, the police are supposed to STOP crime.


I can hear you asking, "Aren't you a pro-union guy?" This article should answer all of your "police union" questions. Long story short, it's not a real union. It's a tool cops use to help their members get away with committing crimes up to and including murder. Because those people you *think* are good cops? They're in that "union," too. All they have to do is speak up, and the bad cops will get punished. But they don't because there's safety in numbers. The good cops keep their mouths shut because they're all brothers. In my opinion they are, to quote Jerry Cantrell, "Leaning more toward Cain than Abel."


And the author is right. Police officer isn't even in the top 10 most dangerous jobs. It comes in at #22. You know what's higher up on the list? At #12 we have crossing guards. And let's not forget that they like to talk themselves up to match with the military. They even call us civilians or citizens, like they're not civilians themselves. Even the guys with military backgrounds are now civilians. But hey, it's a dangerous job. We need military grade weapons in case some guy--er, civilian hurts my feelings. I don't want to just "accidentally" shoot him. I wanna blow him away with a rocket launcher while I stand there looking pretty in my stormtrooper armor.


"Just trust the police, and everything will work out in the end." Eh, no. These fuckers are trained to distrust us. Why should we trust them? And it doesn't matter if they get the guilty party. As long as they have someone for the crime, they're satisfied.


So I'll present some horrific stories of police brutality. I'm going to leave race out of it because I don't want that to confuse the issue. We all know that white people are less likely to be killed by a police officer during a stop. By far. I feel certain I could wave a gun at a cop at a traffic stop, and he'd just try to calm me down. This is a fact of life. Even racists, in their heart of hearts, have to admit that this is a fact. Hell, they're helping make it a fact. Ever hear of ghost skins? They're KKK or neo-Nazis or "white nationalists" (but we all know what that means) who don't have any tattoos, and they're not loud. They're sneaky about their views and can pass easily for non-racists. But their goal is to infiltrate police forces in the name of protecting their white brothers and punishing anyone they don't like with anything from a beating to flat out murder. This is a real thing. It's the subject of an FBI investigation.


But I want to cut through to the heart of the matter, which is this: THE POLICE ARE OBJECTIVELY BAD AT THEIR JOBS. In some states, all they have to say is the phrase, "I thought my life was in danger," and that's practically a Get Out of Jail Free card. They're people who claim to be the best of the best, but when the chips are down, they prove themselves to be cowards who, in "fear for their lives," decide to just fucking kill another person rather than deescalate the situation, which is what they're supposed to do.


"But they deal with people shooting at them all the time." No, not all the time. You're thinking of 'Eighties action movies. But how often do they shoot someone they "thought" had a gun? Which is code for "shoot first, make up lies later." Are you OK with having triggerhappy cowards patrolling your streets? Where your kids walk to school? They're supposed to have cooler heads. They're supposed to be trained for that. But . . . well . . .


You'll hear some stories. Starting tomorrow. And don't ask what my solution is. That's what part 5 is for.