Why is Border Patrol in North Carolina?
PS - the video is NSFW.
If I were a civil liberties lawyer, I'd take this case in a heartbeat given the recent SCOTUS ruling on detainment. These two agents acted completely irresponsibly.
If I were a civil liberties lawyer, I'd take this case in a heartbeat given the recent SCOTUS ruling on detainment. These two agents acted completely irresponsibly.
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I will tell you flat out that if that woman were in my family, those two cops would already be dead. Then, for good measure, I will still pursue the lawsuit against the department after the fact and give any of the proceeds to some organization that fights this kind of thing in the courts.
I said in a previous thread that the silver lining to the Baltimore riots was that the 6 officers involved in Freddie Grey's death were finally charged criminally. My problem with those riots is that the violence and aggression were directed at the wrong targets. Why burn down local businesses when the police station that is protecting the bad cops is right over there? In this case, we know exactly who the bad cops are, and they should bear the consequences for their actions personally. When/if we as a country full of citizens ever do react violently against specific police targets whose guilt is undeniable (as with these two border cops in NC), what would the consequences be?
If you'll recall the findings of the 9/11 commission. Al Qaeda was at war with us even if we were not at war with them. That's what it feels like when you watch a video like this one. It sure feels like the police are at war with us even if we are not at war with them. That begs the question, then. Perhaps we should be. I am not suggesting randomly punching the ticket of every cop you see, but I am arguing the virtue of going after the specific cops like these two who we know act to oppress us. If I were a cop and I knew I was no longer safe behind my thin blue line, I'd either shape up and make for damned sure my actions were always justified, or I'd go find something else to do with my life. No doubt other cops would go ape sh*t, but there are alot more of us than there are of them. If it ever really came to it, one of three things would happen to every cop. 1. He'd learn real freakin' quick how to respect our rights, or 2. He'd quit the force altogether, or 3. He'd simply be eliminated altogether and would no longer be a problem. I'd be OK with any of those 3.
There are two schools of thought on this kind of thing. Some would suggest turning the other cheek. Others, like me, would suggest and eye for an eye. If I am evil for suggesting the latter, then so be it. I know my sins and what I am guilty of. Calling on myself and others to no longer tolerate this kind of behavior from law enforcement officials is a sin that I perfectly happy to live with. I'm a live and let live sort of guy, and so long as my rights (and those of others) are respected, I'm good to go. If, on the other hand, my (our) rights are not respected, then I'm plenty well prepared for that too.
There are many of us that bristle a bit when we are faced with a confrontational interaction with an overly authoritarian official. We do have rights, we are entitled to fully understand why we are singled us out for special review and we do have the right to be treated as innocent until we have been convicted of a crime. I think I read this somewhere in the Constitution, a document that is slowly being relegated to some political backwater by our current administration.
I do hope she gets a lawyer and sues them both, personally.
We quaintly call it "Little Mexico."
3 guesses why. You walk around with a hat that says ICE on it, and the streets vacate and business put closed signs in their windows.
This is another federal police offense against the sovereign people.
Resistance is essential.
My understanding is that standard law enforcement practice is not to issue a taser unless the officer has submitted to being tased themselves. I have to wonder if this officer had undergone it given how quick he was to pull it out when the woman presented no credible threat beyond a loud voice.
"Some pointed to a recent Supreme Court decision barring cops from holding suspects to wait for drug-sniffing dogs without probable cause to bolster Cooke’s position.
Others claimed Cooke was unnecessarily pushy and that the whole situation could have been avoided if she’d just been cooperative."
Just cooperate citizen. Just walk to that door over there that says 'Showers'. You can trust us. We have only your safety in mind.