It opens with a black woman sergeant at the Little Rock PD receiving an odd text message from her white assistant chief.
The message, sent to her and 4 white women, asked the recipients to make sexual harassment complaints against the city's black, reformist chief. pic.twitter.com/vkDpsITHYT
In D.C., the police have the problem of not being able to fire 24 members guilty of criminal misconduct. But that criminal misconduct is not racial (it is mostly brutal domestic abuse or abuse against females.) Indeed, not only is the current Police Chief black, but he was formerly a member of "the powerful tribunal" that favors letting these kind of officers stay on the force rather than be fired. I would just remind all that this is the "savior force" of the day of Jan. 6, who came to the aid of the overwhelmed Capitol Police.
NEW: D.C. Metropolitan Police Department files show that the department tried to fire 24 officers for criminal misconduct from 2009 to 2019.
In all but three of those cases, a powerful tribunal of three high-ranking officers overruled the terminations. https://t.co/V5w9PfB6KF
The files, obtained by Reveal and @wamu885/@DCist, provide a rare glimpse into how officers avoid accountability and remain on the force, even after internal affairs investigators have determined they committed crimes.
In addition to blocking terminations, the records show that the Adverse Action Panel, which included the current police chief Robert J. Contee, issued much lighter punishment — an average of a 29-day suspension without pay. https://t.co/wCYkEB59mhpic.twitter.com/LKlXTbvlkk
Personnel files show that an internal investigation concluded that Officer Steven Ferris was arrested for simple assault in 2012 after Internal Affairs reported he confessed that he punched his wife so hard that he fractured a bone around her eye socket. https://t.co/V5w9PfB6KF
Another officer, Jonathan Goodman, allegedly hit two women at a restaurant in 2010.
When one of them said she was calling the cops, he pulled out his badge and replied, “Bitch, I am the police,” according to the files. https://t.co/V5w9PfB6KF
Neither Contee, the police chief, nor the department would comment on Reveal and WAMU/DCist’s findings. We attempted to reach all of the officers named in this story for comment. Only one responded. https://t.co/wCYkEB59mhpic.twitter.com/yvGVHuNvYk
A major reason why Los Angeles today is a vastly improved place over the one I grew up in during the 1980s is that the LAPD was brought to heel after the Rodney King uprising, which formed a precondition for a relative racial reconciliation in the city. https://t.co/iF62ui2Rt3
jesus fucking christ. LAPD opened fire in a crowded store two days before christmas intending to kill someone wielding a bike lock, and they killed a random child instead.
Don't let "officer involved shooting" do the work these cops want it to do. https://t.co/Dv4fvOMfqP
— Damien P. Williams, MA, MSc, ABD, Patternist (@Wolven) December 24, 2021
though of course there was quite a difference in the incidents in intent
Comments
Still, a lot of reform to do
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 12/20/2021 - 1:58pm
In D.C., the police have the problem of not being able to fire 24 members guilty of criminal misconduct. But that criminal misconduct is not racial (it is mostly brutal domestic abuse or abuse against females.) Indeed, not only is the current Police Chief black, but he was formerly a member of "the powerful tribunal" that favors letting these kind of officers stay on the force rather than be fired. I would just remind all that this is the "savior force" of the day of Jan. 6, who came to the aid of the overwhelmed Capitol Police.
by artappraiser on Tue, 12/21/2021 - 8:58am
Worried bout smacking round wimmin? So 2015.
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 12/21/2021 - 10:16am
they are talking about it because this just happened yesterday
though of course there was quite a difference in the incidents in intent
by artappraiser on Fri, 12/24/2021 - 9:12am
re: LAPD -
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/29/2021 - 6:56pm