Rise of the Warrior Cop

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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Jun 15, 2015 12:43 pm

Meet the Dark Future of Forced Police Compliance, Tasers that Take Down Entire Crowds
By Justin Gardner on June 13, 2015

The militarization of police, combined with swelling government revenues through citizen extortion, creates a demand for next-generation “less than lethal” weapons. Even as the stun gun has killed hundreds of people and injured thousands more, the state’s ability to deliver electroshock is becoming ever more efficient and frightening.

The Taser Shockwave is advertised as the first “area denial system.” A single remote-controlled unit fires 12 Taser darts in a 25 foot range across a 20 degree arc, taking down multiple protesters in a single shot. The units can be stacked vertically and horizontally, covering an area the size of a football field. The launched probes can be recharged multiple times, keeping pesky protesters writhing on the ground for several minutes.

“What if you could drop everyone in a given area to the ground?” asks a sinister promotional video.


But why limit electroshock delivery to ground-based methods? Taser drones are being developed to zap crowds from the air. Last year the CUPID drone was tested on an intern at Chaotic Moon Studios, successfully delivering 80,000 volts of electricity from the unmanned aerial vehicle. While the company did not develop the drone for commercialization, it invariably has attracted the interest of military and law enforcement.

William Hurley, the company’s co-founder, intended for the demonstration to be a wake-up call.

“We, as a society, should all be involved in the conversation of technology governance, not just the legislators who often do a knee jerk reaction, or the inventors and entrepreneurs who often don’t think about some of the consequences of their technologies,
We, as the people who have to live our everyday lives, often are either affected by or ruled by things that we never have a discussion about or are never involved in.”
The voice of restraint is lost in the white noise of corrupt bureaucracies, monied interests and the drive to subdue the citizenry.

Another advanced device called the Taser XREP was involved in the murder of James Boyd, a homeless man in Albuquerque, New Mexico, by police officer Keith Sandy. Officer Sandy had every intention of harming Mr. Boyd with the electrified 12-gauge shotgun projectile.

Stun guns were purportedly adopted by police departments as “less than lethal” or “pain compliance” weapons. However, their use is proving to significantly increase the chance of citizen injury, and they are routinely used as a form of brutality.

“Mounting evidence shows that the weapon is routinely used on people who pose little threat: those in handcuffs, in jail cells, in wheelchairs and hospital beds; schoolchildren, pregnant women, the mentally disturbed, the elderly; irate shoppers, obnoxious lawyers, argumentative drivers, nonviolent protesters — in fact, YouTube now has an entire category of videos in which people are Tasered for dubious reasons.”

The claims of safety from law enforcement and industry are predicated on a host of biased studies funded by the Taser International, Inc. or written by authors affiliated with the company.

Despite the crooked justifications, the familiar stories of death by Taser, and routine abuse by police officers, the state forges ahead with new and improved methods of electroshock delivery.


Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Jul 01, 2015 7:42 pm


https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=71&v=eO4DLHrjetU

Video Catches Cop on Rampage as Fellow Cops Try to Stop Him From Torturing Handcuffed Man
The footage shows nothing short of torture, carried out by one, Officer Mark Magness.
By Matt Agorist / The Free Thought Project June 30, 2015

Federal Heights, CO — Officer Mark Magness is no stranger to police brutality. In 2009, after being on the Federal Heights police department for a year, Magness was convicted of misdemeanor assault after he broke an innocent man’s arm while investigating the popping of illegal fireworks.

Despite pleading guilty to assault, Magness was never fired.

Now, 6 years later, we are witnessing the horrid negligence of this department for allowing a monster like Magness to remain in a position of power.

ABC 7 Denver,obtained body cam footage of two Federal Heights officers. The footage shows nothing short of torture, carried out by one, Officer Mark Magness.

The 9 minute and 30-second long video begins as Magness yanks the handcuffed man from the car and smashes his face into the wall. The man immediately starts bleeding profusely from the mouth.

“Stand up!” yells Magness to the man he just threw down. In the background, the man can be heard apologizing as he’s thrown around like a ragdoll.

The man, who is now fairly agitated after being assaulted while in handcuffs is thrown into the cell. He then makes a mistake and raises his open hand toward Magness.

At this point, Magness jumps on the man and begins pummeled him. Magness, knowing that his body camera is recording this abuse, continues to yell out, “Stop Resisting!” throughout the abuse in an attempt to justify his torturous ways.

One of the officers points at Magness’ chest in an apparent attempt to warn this maniac that his actions are being recorded. “F**k that! F**k that!” yells Magness as to imply that he has no intentions of stopping this assault, regardless of being recorded.

The man, who is now in handcuffs again, is thrown into a restraint chair by Magness, again apologizing the entire time.

“I’m sorry, sir, I won’t do nothing else,” the man says.

“We’re gonna need medical,” the second officer says pointing to his chin.

“I don’t care, strap him to the chair,” Magness replies.

Then the man yells “ow!” as Magness gouges his temple. Magness replies, “no this is ‘ow,'” as he jams his finger underneath the man’s ear.

The entire time Magness continues to yell, “Stop Resisting!”

What the man was being arrested for and the totality of his injuries were not released by the department.

However, court records show that on June 17, Magness pleaded guilty to attempted third-degree assault for this attack which happened in December.

Magness’ status with the Federal Heights police department has yet to be released publicly.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby coffin_dodger » Mon Aug 03, 2015 7:47 pm

Meet the “Expert” Who Teaches Cops to Shoot First and Then Gets Paid to Get them Off After 03 Aug 2105

When cops kill people and aren’t indicted for their murderous actions, the public is often left wondering how in the world this could happen. Well, after meeting “Dr.” William J. Lewinski, the self-proclaimed “expert” in the field of police shootings, you will have a clearer picture of why killer cops get off scot free, most of the time.

After receiving his mail order doctorate from the Union for Experimenting Colleges and Universities, Lewinski opened his company called the Force Science Institute Ltd. He then began travelling around the country giving training seminars to police departments. According to the NY, the “training” and “studies” presented by Lewinski are referred to as “pseudoscience” by the American Journal of Psychology.

In his seminars, Lewinski essentially teaches police officers to immediately resort to deadly violence by telling officers they can be shot by a suspect within a quarter of a second should the suspect be armed.
This man travels the country and encourages officers to shoot first and ask questions later using self-created arbitrary pseudoscience.

cont - http://www.thefreethoughtproject.com/me ... sWdJV1v.99
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby Grizzly » Mon Aug 03, 2015 11:16 pm

Persistent Surveillance Systems

http://www.pss-1.com/

http://www.radiolab.org/story/eye-sky/

http://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comme ... t_last_by/

Good discussion on William J. Lewinski, the self-proclaimed “expert”, above, here:

http://www.metafilter.com/151772/Traini ... ions-Later

Bonus:
The Man Who Shot Michael Brown
http://www.metafilter.com/151781/The-Ma ... hael-Brown
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby Luther Blissett » Wed Aug 19, 2015 11:12 am

For all of us who read Martinot and Balko, even this thread and the Militarization of the Police thread, this won't be "surprising" at all.

New documents show the surprising reasons local cops want vehicles designed for war
Updated by German Lopez on August 12, 2015, 11:20 a.m. ET @germanrlopez german.lopez@vox.com

Why do law enforcement officials feel they need military-grade equipment to police our streets? Apparently, they feel they're really fighting a war — a war on drugs.

The 2014 Ferguson, Missouri, protests put a lot of attention on the military-grade equipment used by some law enforcement agencies for even basic policing. And public police advocates said they need the weapons to fight major threats, such as terrorism.

But it turns out the real focus may be drugs.

Mother Jones's Molly Redden requested records of police departments' applications for armored vehicles to the Pentagon between 2012 and 2014. What she found is that most police agencies said they needed mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPs) — which some have compared to tanks — to help fight drug trafficking. Cops rarely cited active shooters, hostage situations, or terrorism, as police advocates did in the past year's debate over the military-grade equipment.

Redden ran through the numbers:
[T]he single most common reason agencies requested a mine-resistant vehicle was to combat drugs. Fully a quarter of the 465 requests projected using the vehicles for drug enforcement. Almost half of all departments indicated that they sit within a region designated by the federal government as a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area. (Nationwide, only 17 percent of counties are HIDTAs.) One out of six departments were prepared to use the vehicles to serve search or arrest warrants on individuals who had yet to be convicted of a crime. And more than half of the departments indicated they were willing to deploy armored vehicles in a broad range of Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) raids.

By contrast, out of the total 465 requests, only 8 percent mention the possibility of a barricaded gunman. For hostage situations, the number is 7 percent, for active shooters, 6 percent. Only a handful mentioned downed officers or the possibility of terrorism.


Some of the requests even focused on marijuana, which is now legal in four states. Here are a few examples, taken from the full documents obtained by Mother Jones:
  • Shasta County, California, Sheriff's Office: "The Armored Tactical Vehicle will be used during apprehension of suspects in both Marijuana eradication and during high risk search warrant service for drug offenders. It will also be used to assist allied agencies."
  • Cass County, Minnesota, Sheriff's Office: "significant increase of outdoor Marijuana grows with in [sic] the county."
  • Clearwater County, Idaho, Sheriff's Office: "The MRAP will be used for Drug and Marijuana eradication. The nearest MRAP is 6 hours from us. The MRAP will help provide safety to Deputies when performing high risk operations."

It's unclear just how much of a drug and marijuana trafficking problem Cass County, with a population of 28,500, and Clearwater County, with a population of 8,500, have. But apparently the sheriff's offices think they're big enough issues to require trucks that can withstand bomb blasts to address.

But not all of the police departments had their requests fulfilled. Out of the 466 applications filed, Redden estimated "a few dozen" got the vehicles, based on federal data obtained by the New York Times and the Marshall Project.

The focus on drugs isn't exactly surprising, given that the federal program was first established in the 1990s to help fight the drug war. The Pentagon's 1033 program supplies police departments with surplus military equipment — from MRAPs to combat rifles — with the explicit goals of fighting drugs and terrorism. (Other programs from the Department of Homeland Security and Department of Justice also help provide this type of equipment to police.)

But even if police don't request these trucks to fight drugs, they may end up using them in those scenarios anyway. That's because the 1033 program requires police use the equipment within a year of obtaining it, or the federal government takes it back. The American Civil Liberties Union argues that this essentially encourages police to use the weapons even when they're not totally necessary.

Still, many law enforcement agencies genuinely feel they need these kinds of weapons — even in seemingly tiny communities — to fight drugs. And that's just another way the war on drugs has changed policing in the US to be far more aggressive.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby Nordic » Wed Aug 19, 2015 6:27 pm

I've just started watching "Silicon Valley" on HBO, and at the end of Season One, there is a competition of start-ups. The story shows most of the Start-ups to be silly stupid things, comically, so, but there's one that they especially make fun of, and that's a system that heats you up, can literally be used as a heater, by radiating people with microwaves radiation. It just heats up the skin, so it's efficient!

Several characters make fun of this, and say it cannot ever be used, and they are outraged.

Yet this is the same thing that the police, and our military, now has. Somehow they managed to NOT say this in the show! It was presented as something over the top and impossible, and, well, unthinkable.

Yet it exists.

What's up with that, Mike Judge?
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby coffin_dodger » Wed Aug 19, 2015 7:25 pm

Nordic wrote:What's up with that, Mike Judge?


I believe it to be 'normalisation'.

Normalisation occurs when society tackles unpleasant topics (usually exclusive to the 99%) from a tangential angle, rather than head-on. It's a new introduction to an already conceived and understood notion, via an alternate back-door. Virtually guaranteed to make the topic in question somehow more palateable. It's pervasive and thoroughly organised throughout the entire media spectrum.

The more accepting you are, the less there is to rage against - however, the more accepting you are, the greater the probability you'll accept anything.

Catch-22 (divided by) Double Bind (times) cog dis = passified. < I wonder if there's a mathematical formula with symbols and shit, for that.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 04, 2015 12:11 pm

Massachusetts Police Call Off Massive Manhunt After Concluding That Officer Shot Up His Own Cruiser

The manhunt is over in Massachusetts for the man who shot up the cruiser of a rookie Millis police officer. It appears, according to police, that it was the officer himself. The police have refused to identified the 27-year-old officer but confirmed that the officer was found to be the one who shot up the car and will likely be fired (I would hope so) and face criminal charges.


The hoax led to the closing of the public schools and a massive manhunt. However, investigators eventually took a closer look at the bullets and the bullet holes and focused their attention on the full-time dispatcher and a part-time officer.

The officer claimed that a gunman in a pickup truck shot at the cruiser, caused it to crash and catch fire. The police announced that due to interviews and “as a result of all other evidence, we have determined that the officer’s story was fabricated . . . specifically, that he fired shots into his own cruiser as part of a plan to concoct a story that he was fired upon. The evidence indicates that the shots were not fired by a suspect. And there was no gunman at large in or around the town.’’

The officer has only been with the department for a year and half. The question now is how much of a sentence he will face. He could be charged with a false police report, wanton destruction of public property, criminal hoax, and other charges. That could stack up into some serious time.

What is bizarre is that the ballistics only found bullets from the officer’s own gun. What did he think was going to happen? Clearly the bullets would be tested and run through the Integrated Ballistics Identification System, or IBIS, to see if the weapon was used in other crimes. I simply cannot imagine the rationale. It is not clear if the officer had an accident and was trying to cover it up or whether this was a sad effort at notoriety. Either way, it will now likely cost him both his job and his liberty.



Corrections Officers Took Away Diabetic Man’s Insulin, Then Watched Him Slowly Die
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Sep 07, 2015 5:22 pm

Because They Lack Crucial Training, These Cops Severely Beat a Blind Autistic Teen Unconscious
On his way home, an encounter with the police left the teen beaten and unconscious.
By Jay Syrmopoulos / The Free Thought Project September 5, 2015

The family of an autistic teen is speaking out after he was violently arrested, and rendered unconscious by Metro Transit Police while traveling home after working at the Minnesota State Fair. Marcus Abrams is an apprentice with Urban Boatbuilders, a youth organization, and had been exhibiting his work at the Minnesota State Fair. On his way home, an encounter with the police left the teen beaten and unconscious.

During the incident, Abrams, 17, suffered two seizures after police used force against him at the Green Line’s Lexington Parkway Station. The attack resulted in a split lip and lacerations on his face and head, according to his mother, Maria Caldwell.

The teen suffers from Asperger’s syndrome, which causes him to strongly dislike being touched or having people in his person space, and is considered legally blind, wearing extremely magnified glasses, according to Caldwell.

Caldwell said that upon approaching her son it should have been plainly obvious to the officers that her son had disabilities.

“If they had training with dealing with an autistic child or someone like an Alzheimer’s patient … it would seem they would have known how to handle him better than they did,” Caldwell told the Pioneer Press on Wednesday.
Abrams was standing on the train tracks moments before police approached him. When police initially approached, the teen was wearing headphones and couldn’t hear everything police said, with officers then accusing him of using drugs or being intoxicated.

“One grabbed my arm and the other one grabbed my wrist and I told them to get off me — I did nothing wrong,” Abrams told KARE 11. “They just slammed me right on the ground. I tried to get them off me and (one officer had his) whole body on my whole face and I couldn’t breathe.”
According to a report by KARE 11:

Abrams and friends who were with him are apprentices with Urban Boatbuilders, a youth organization, and they had been demonstrating their work at the Minnesota State Fair. They were heading home from there, waiting for a train, when Abrams jumped onto the tracks. The teen said Wednesday he was “mostly playing around, like play fighting.”

Abrams was on the tracks for about 10 seconds, said his 15-year-old friend, who was helping Abrams get home; Abrams usually has someone to help him wherever he goes, his mother said. Abrams had just returned to the platform when officers approached.

Officers thought the non-compliance of Abrams was reason enough to justify forcibly taking him down, which resulted in him being battered and left unconscious.

Abrams non-compliance wasn’t done out of malice, but out of not really understanding the situation, and believing he hadn’t done anything wrong. Abrams’ autism makes it extremely difficult for him to interpret the intentions or feelings of others, according to his mother.

Police released the teen to the custody of his mother rather than take him to the juvenile detention facility, with his disabilities being “one of the determining factors,” according to Caldwell.

Police do not plan on presenting the case to prosecutors or to bring any charges, according to Metro Transit spokesman Howie Padilla.

Caldwell said she simply wants to see officers recognize abnormal behavior and people exhibiting signs of mental illness.

“I don’t want autism to be a crime, I don’t want people that have it to think that it is a crime. I don’t want people going around saying, ‘oh well if your child is this way they shouldn’t be out here by themselves,'” she said. “He was put in a situation where he was stressed out, a lot of pressure and confused. And I think that is what brought on his seizures.”
Police are trained to think like the military in combat, which means they prioritize their own safety and the safety of fellow officers over everything else, including that of the citizens they allegedly “protect and serve.”

They are trained to take control of situations, rather than think critically, which results in an exponential number of unnecessary violent altercations with citizens who questions their “authority.” In reality, many of these incidents would require no force, or violent response whatsoever, and could be easily de-escalated and peaceably resolved.

When your only tool is a hammer, suddenly everything begins to look like a nail; including the disabled and mentally ill.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 18, 2015 2:34 pm

Black teenager arrested by nine California police officers after 'jaywalking'
Video shows unarmed teenager forced to ground by group of Stockton police officers after allegedly walking in a bus lane

Nine police officers arrest an unarmed black teenager in California for allegedly jaywalking in a bus-only lane and scuffling with an officer in Stockton, California
Rory Carroll in Los Angeles
@rorycarroll72
Thursday 17 September 2015 22.08 EDT Last modified on Thursday 17 September 2015 22.58 EDT

Nine police officers arrested an unarmed black teenager in California after he allegedly jaywalked and then scuffled with an officer.

A video of the incident shows the officers surrounding the 16-year-old African American and forcing him to the ground after he got into an altercation with an officer who accused him of walking in a bus-only lane.

The incident happened in the city of Stockton, 80 miles (130km) east of San Francisco, on Wednesday morning. A cellphone video uploaded to Facebook and YouTube by a passerby has been viewed more than 10,000 times.

It shows an officer using his baton to push and hold the boy, wearing shorts, on a landscaped perimeter on the sidewalk.

They scuffle, the boy yelling “get the fuck off me” and the officer shouting “stop resisting arrest”. The officer strikes him in the face and orders him to the ground but the boy does not comply.

An unseen female bystander shouts in protest: “That’s a fucking kid! Don’t touch him, leave him alone! That’s a kid. Are you serious? He didn’t do nothing wrong.”

The officer retrieves from the ground what appears to be a body camera knocked off during the scuffle.

Several patrol cars arrive and four officers force the boy to the ground, handcuff him and march him to a car while colleagues mill around them. The protester’s voice rises in anger and disbelief: “That is a child! That is child that was jaywalking! That’s a fucking child! What’s wrong with y’all?”

In a Facebook post he said the officer tried to stop the teenager for jaywalking and ordered him to sit but the teen kept walking to his bus.

“The cop kept grabbing his arm & the kid took off the cop’s hand off his arm so the cop took out his baton & that’s when I started recording because everything happened too quick. He didn’t have to hit the kid with the baton & no need to call about 20 cops.”

Joseph Silva, a spokesman for Stockton’s police department, told the Guardian the first officer had seen the teen walking in a bus lane near the city’s transit center.

The teen “cussed” when ordered onto the sidewalk “for safety reasons”, said Silva. “These things wouldn’t happen if people followed officers’ lawful instructions.”

The teenager was held in custody and released to his mother pending a charge in juvenile court with resisting arrest and trespassing.

It appeared that the officers acted within policy but the incident was under review because any use of force triggers an automatic administrative review, said Silva. The boy’s family has filed a complaint, he added.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby Grizzly » Fri Sep 18, 2015 6:45 pm

Yeah, I have seen three different versions of this event, two of them with the beginning edited out where the fucking cop has his billy club out and isn't hitting him, but using it in a proactive and aggressive way to wrestle the kid with it. Both versions on t.v. never show that part. I was shocked that they cut that part out and was in momentarily cognitive dissonance at the blatant spin. :wallhead:
Poor kid. I hate these bully motherfuckers.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Sep 22, 2015 1:48 pm

Oakland Residents Respond as the Largest Police Training in the World Invades
The Urban Shield police expo has become so popular among police around the world that the Sheriff’s Office no longer has to advertise.
By Aaron CantúTwitter YESTERDAY 5:00 AM

This past weekend in Pleasanton, California, a suburb of San Francisco, elite police teams from as far away as South Korea, Uruguay, and Jordan converged for the ninth annual Urban Shield Expo and Conference, one of the largest tactical-police summits in the world. According to the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office, which manages Urban Shield, almost 6,000 volunteers agreed to help SWAT teams coordinate with fire departments, healthcare providers, and other agencies to simulate responses to “mass casualty” events like attacks against law enforcement, mass shootings, and earthquakes. For 48 hours across five counties in Northern California, teams of police dressed like soldiers toted assault rifles down suburban streets and burst into buildings as part of a series of tactical exercises. By most accounts, Urban Shield is now one of the largest training events for militarized police in the world.

While proponents say the program prepares governments for disasters, critics say it’s ground zero for police to refine and exchange repressive military tactics. A campaign called Stop Urban Shield Coalition mobilized at least 150 demonstrators to march in protest against the event through downtown Oakland. “Our goal is to prevent Urban Shield from continuing and stopping the County from renewing its contract,” said Ali Issa, a field organizer with the War Resisters League, one of four groups on the coalition’s coordinating committee. For Issa and the coalition, Urban Shield is the epitome of a militarized security apparatus that maims, tracks, and controls black and brown people.

Sergeant J.D. Nelson, a spokesperson for the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office, couldn’t understand why people took issue with an event that’s meant, in his view, to keep everybody safer in the event of disaster. “Fire and medical teams won’t come in without an escort, period,” he told The Nation. “So police have to have some sort of methodology to lead them so you can save lives.”

But given the history of police relations with their communities, says Mohamed Shehk, a spokesperson for the Stop Urban Shield Coalition, a militarized police force and the criminalization it engenders are the primary threats against America’s nonwhite underclass. “We definitely see Urban Shield as kind of the epitome of the systems we’re working against,” Shehk said.

Urban Shield is funded primarily by a Department of Homeland Security grant called the Urban Areas Security Initiative, which this year will disburse $587 million for mass-disaster security preparations to 28 major cities deemed most at risk. Alameda County will have received $6,358,000 from UASI between November 1, 2014, and February 28, 2016, and $1.7 million of those funds must be spent on Urban Shield. How the money is spent is entirely at the discretion of the Sheriff’s Office, according to Shawn Wilson, a spokesperson for the Alameda County Board of Supervisors.

The program was initially created in 2007 by the Alameda county sheriff as a regional response simulation for terrorist attacks, but in recent years teams of police from across the country and globe have shown up to train and observe. Teams from across the United States, including the Jacksonville [Florida] County Sheriff’s Office, the Miami-Dade Police Department, and the Travis County [Texas] Sheriff’s Office, were joined by counterparts from China and Israel, among others, to study or participate in 58 anti-terror scenarios, although the summit’s main event was a coordinated response to a large earthquake. J.D. Nelson said all of the teams “learn from each other” and leave with new ideas.

The press has mostly focused on Urban Shield’s weapons-and-gear expo, where over 100 private companies hawk things like heat-sensing rifle telescopes, armored trucks, surveillance drones, and even biometric identification technology for law enforcement. According to Nelson, the expo and trainings have become so popular among police around the world that the Sheriff’s Office no longer has to advertise Urban Shield. Instead, he said, “we get people contacting us.”

* * *

Though Alameda County may be the world’s new headquarters for militarized law enforcement, it has a longer history as hotbed of activism. The University of California, Berkeley, is located here, as is Oakland’s Merritt College, where Huey Newton and Bobby Seale formed the Black Panther Party as students in 1966. Years later, organizer Alicia Garza created the first posters bearing the words “Black Lives Matter” the day after George Zimmerman’s not-guilty verdict.

Some of the most intense Black Lives Matter protests in the country have occurred in Oakland, including an action last December during which protesters chained their bodies to the door of the Oakland Police Department. Kamau Walker, a member of Black Lives Matter in the Bay Area, said black organizers there see resistance to Urban Shield as a way of protecting the welfare of black folks everywhere.

“Oakland is used as a testing ground for new tactics and new strategies of state repression,” she said, citing local police use of tear gas against Occupy Oakland as an inspiration for Ferguson police three years later. The visibility of Urban Shield, coupled with heightened consciousness after a year of direct actions, has opened up “a lot of community building space” for new people to join veteran organizers from anti-racist and anti-war groups.

There’s long been a sense here, too, that resisting the police also means resisting the military, according to Sagnicthe Salazar, an educator and organizer with the Xicana Moratorium Coalition, which supports the Stop Urban Shield Coalition and educates Latino youth on topics including capitalism, race, and the history of the oppressed.

“Making the connection between police and the military is simple for black and brown communities because we live in communities where we have constant helicopters flying above our neighborhoods, SWAT teams raiding our apartment buildings, shooting projectiles and tear gas in full riot gear,” she told The Nation.

In fact, Salazar said, the Xicana Moratorium Coalition began working in tight formation with other community groups at the onset of America’s invasion of Iraq. Then more extreme times followed: The integration of police and immigration agents resulted in ever-larger numbers of people being deported, and the FBI began entrapping Muslims and Arabs across California. The number of people displaced by gentrification in the Bay Area increased, and those who remained were targeted by quality-of-life policing. In response to their related struggles, Salazar says the Xicana Moratorium Coalition engages in cross-community education with black and Arab groups about each other’s specific issues.

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That coordination has become central to organizing in the Bay Area, said Lara Kiswani, the executive director of the Arab Resource and Organizing Center, which is on the coordinating committee for Stop Urban Shield Coalition. She said last year’s images from Ferguson moved many in the Bay Area’s Arab community to recall Palestine’s occupation by Israel (which continued to have a large showing at Urban Shield 2015).

“These connections are sort of new in terms of understanding the role of policing in the US as an occupying force, which has helped to build solidarity between Arabs and blacks and other brown communities,” she said. “That’s built on a history of work done between black and brown communities in this country, but this particular moment has potential to heighten solidarity and make material impact.”

Organizing has made an impact in Alameda County before. Relentless activism pushed the Oakland City Council to kill plans for a city-wide mass surveillance program, and former Mayor Jean Quan pledged the city would not host 2015’s Urban Shield following outrage over Ferguson. And this year, a police- and prisons-abolition group called Critical Resistance has launched the Oakland Power Projects, an initiative to reduce people’s reliance on police in emergency situations by widening channels of communication between residents and healthcare givers. The first project, which will develop an Anti-Policing Health Workers Cohort made up of doctors, nurses, healers, and counselors, begins this weekend.

Mohamed Shehk, spokesperson for the abolitionist group as well as Stop Urban Shield Coalition, sees the police summit as a way for the state to conflate “health-service provision and military style tactics in a way where receiving healthcare is now inseparable from being confronted with an M16 rifle.” One of the coalition’s goals, he said, was to “make these connections between what’s happening not just in the Bay Area but also other countries and places across the world,” including the Middle East and Latin America.

Like a mirror image, Urban Shield is also building coordination among law enforcement, albeit one overseen by spies. One of the main functions of this year’s Urban Shield was to enhance intelligence-sharing between users of two different emergency management systems, which allow police and other first responders to monitor and issue alerts for various public “incidents,” including mass shootings, natural disasters, and unwieldy protests. But whatever the incident, such coordination is meant to command geographical space like an army with total “situational awareness”—the same phrase used by police and the Department of Homeland Security to justify surveillance of Black Lives Matter protests across the country.

* * *

The campaign to stop Urban Shield didn’t end after last weekend, said Ali Issa. Having succeeded in drawing enough attention that it’s become an international scandal to many, he and members of Stop Urban Shield are hopeful that they can kick the event out of Oakland and see it abolished entirely.

“This year I feel like it’s definitely broader than it used to be in terms of national attention and groups locally here, especially connecting to Black Lives Matter with other existing movements,” Issa said. “It’s just such a clear example of escalating police force, and it’s becoming a clear target for many different struggles at the same time.”

Sergeant J.D. Nelson from the sheriff’s office had an entirely different opinion. “It’s a great program and every year it gets better than the year before,” he said. He predicts a bright future for Urban Shield and militarized police in a world teeming with catastrophe, which he seems to see everywhere.

“For those who said they didn’t want Urban Shield in Oakland this year,” he said, “when we were down there last year, it was crime-free. Now they had a guy shot next to the hotel [that hosted last year’s summit]. Yeah. Put a thousand police in the area and the bad guys tend to stay clear.”

Putting a thousand police on a city block to prevent random crime may sound like a police state, but Nelson doesn’t see it that way. To him, Urban Shield got the finest seal of approval this year when United States Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson traveled to Pleasanton to praise the program. “If one of Obama’s cabinet members comes to California to speak to us, they’re pretty happy with what we do.”

But the Stop Urban Shield Coalition is aiming much higher than a single summit. Mohamed Shehk said they wouldn’t stop until they’ve ended the culture and infrastructure that sustains Urban Shield.

“It would be a victory when Urban Shield doesn’t happen anywhere anymore, but it goes further than that. It’s connecting to longer struggles against policing and for self-determination, so whether that comes from organizing against the prison-industrial complex, or police’s war on black people in this country, or migrant communities and the militarization of the border, they are all very much related in this struggle.”
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby backtoiam » Tue Oct 13, 2015 4:30 pm

How Do You Prepare a Child for Life in the American Police State?


The Rutherford Institute – by John W. Whitehead

“Fear isn’t so difficult to understand. After all, weren’t we all frightened as children? Nothing has changed since Little Red Riding Hood faced the big bad wolf. What frightens us today is exactly the same sort of thing that frightened us yesterday. It’s just a different wolf.” ― Alfred Hitchcock

In an age dominated with news of school shootings, school lockdowns, police shootings of unarmed citizens (including children), SWAT team raids gone awry (leaving children devastated and damaged), reports of school resource officers tasering and shackling unruly students, and public schools undergoing lockdowns and active drills, I find myself wrestling with the question: how do you prepare a child for life in the American police state?

Every parent lives with a fear of the dangers that prey on young children: the predators who lurk at bus stops and playgrounds, the traffickers who make a living by selling young bodies, the peddlers who push drugs that ensnare and addict, the gangs that deal in violence and bullets, the drunk drivers, the school bullies, the madmen with guns, the diseases that can end a life before it’s truly begun, the cynicism of a modern age that can tarnish innocence, and the greed of a corporate age that makes its living by trading on young consumers.

It’s difficult enough raising a child in a world ravaged by war, disease, poverty and hate, but when you add the police state into the mix—with its battlefield mindset, weaponry, rigidity, surveillance, fascism, indoctrination, violence, etc.—it becomes near impossible to guard against the toxic stress of police shootings, SWAT team raids, students being tasered and shackled, lockdown drills, and a growing unease that some of the monsters of our age come dressed in government uniforms.

Children are taught from an early age that there are consequences for their actions. Hurt somebody, lie, steal, cheat, etc., and you will get punished. But how do you explain to a child that a police officer can shoot someone who was doing nothing wrong and get away with it? That a cop can lie, steal, cheat, or kill and still not be punished?

Kids understand accidents: sometimes drinks get spilled, dishes get broken, people slip and fall and hurt themselves, or you bump into someone without meaning to, and they get hurt. As long as it wasn’t intentional and done with malice, you forgive them and you move on. Police shootings of unarmed people—of children and old people and disabled people—can’t just be shrugged off as accidents, however.

Tamir Rice was no accident. Cleveland police shot and killed the 12-year-old, who was seen playing on a playground with a pellet gun. Surveillance footage shows police shooting the boy two seconds after getting out of a moving patrol car. Incredibly, the shooting was deemed “reasonable” and “justified” by two law enforcement experts who concluded that the police use of force “did not violate Tamir’s constitutional rights.”

Aiyana Jones was also no accident. The 7-year-old was killed after a Detroit SWAT team launched a flash-bang grenade into her family’s apartment, broke through the door and opened fire, hitting the little girl who was asleep on the living room couch. The cops weren’t even in the right apartment. Ironically, on the same day that President Obama refused to stop equipping police with the very same kinds of military weapons and gear used to raid Aiyana’s home, it was reported that the police officer who shot and killed the little girl would not face involuntary manslaughter charges.

Obama insists that $263 million to purchase body cameras for police will prevent any further erosions of trust, but a body camera would not have prevented Aiyana from being shot in the head. Indeed, the entire sorry affair was captured on camera: a TV crew was filming the raid for an episode of The First 48, a true-crime reality show in which homicide detectives have 48 hours to crack a case.

While that $263 million will make Taser International, the manufacturer of the body cameras, a whole lot richer, it’s doubtful it would have prevented a SWAT team from shooting 14-month-old Sincere in the shoulder and hand and killing his mother.

No body camera could have stopped a Georgia SWAT team from launching a flash-bang grenade into the house in which Baby Bou Bou, his three sisters and his parents were staying. The grenade landed in the 2-year-old’s crib, burning a hole in his chest and leaving him with scarring that a lifetime of surgeries will not be able to easily undo.

No body camera could have prevented 10-year-old Dakota Corbitt from being shot by a Georgia police officer who tried to shoot an inquisitive dog, missed, and hit the young boy, instead.

When police shot 4-year-old Ava Ellis in the leg, shattering the bone, it actually was an accident, but it was an accident that could have been prevented. Police reported to Ava’s house after being told that Ava’s mother, who had cut her arm, was in need of a paramedic. Cops claimed that the family pet charged the officer who was approaching the house, causing him to fire his gun and hit the little girl.

Alberto Sepulveda, 11, died from one “accidental” shotgun round to the back, after a SWAT team raided his parents’ home. Thirteen-year-old Andy Lopez Cruz was shot 7 times in 10 seconds by a California police officer who mistook the boy’s toy gun for an assault rifle. Christopher Roupe, 17, was shot and killed after opening the door to a police officer. The officer, mistaking the Wii remote control in Roupe’s hand for a gun, shot him in the chest.

These children are more than grim statistics on a police blotter. They are the heartbreaking casualties of the government’s endless, deadly wars on terror, on drugs, and on the American people themselves.

Not even the children who survive their encounters with police escape unscathed. Increasingly, their lives are daily lessons in compliance and terror, meted out with every SWAT team raid, roadside strip search, and school drill.

Who is calculating the damage being done to the young people forced to watch as their homes are trashed and their dogs are shot during SWAT team raids? A Minnesota SWAT team actually burst into one family’s house, shot the family’s dog, handcuffed the children and forced them to “sit next to the carcass of their dead and bloody pet for more than an hour.” They later claimed it was the wrong house.

More than 80% of American communities have their own SWAT teams, with more than 80,000 of these paramilitary raids are carried out every year. That translates to more than 200 SWAT team raids every day in which police crash through doors, damage private property, terrorize adults and children alike, kill family pets, assault or shoot anyone that is perceived as threatening—and all in the pursuit of someone merely suspected of a crime, usually some small amount of drugs.

What are we to tell our nation’s children about the role of police in their lives? Do you parrot the government line thatpolice officers are community helpers who are to be trusted and obeyed at all times? Do you caution them to steer clear of a police officer, warning them that any interactions could have disastrous consequences? Or is there some happy medium between the two that, while being neither fairy tale nor horror story, can serve as a cautionary tale for young people who will encounter police at virtually every turn?

No matter what you say, there can be no avoiding the hands-on lessons being taught in the schools about the role of police in our lives, ranging from active shooter drills and school-wide lockdowns to incidents in which children engaging in typically childlike behavior are suspended (for shooting an imaginary “arrow” at a fellow classmate), handcuffed (for being disruptive at school), arrested (for throwing water balloons as part of a school prank), and even tasered (for not obeying instructions).

For example, a middle school in Washington State went on lockdown after a student brought a toy gun to class. A Boston high school went into lockdown for four hours after a bullet was discovered in a classroom. A North Carolina elementary school locked down and called in police after a fifth grader reported seeing an unfamiliar man in the school (it turned out to be a parent).

Better safe than sorry is the rationale offered to those who worry that these drills are terrorizing and traumatizing young children. As journalist Dahlia Lithwick points out: “I don’t recall any serious national public dialogue about lockdown protocols or how they became the norm. It seems simply to have begun, modeling itself on the lockdowns that occur during prison riots, and then spread until school lockdowns and lockdown drills are as common for our children as fire drills, and as routine as duck-and-cover drills were in the 1950s.”

These drills have, indeed, become routine.

As the New York Times reports: “Most states have passed laws requiring schools to devise safety plans, and several states, including Michigan, Kentucky and North Dakota, specifically require lockdown drills. Some drills are as simple as a principal making an announcement and students sitting quietly in a darkened classroom. At other schools, police officers and school officials playact a shooting, stalking through the halls like gunmen and testing whether doors have been locked.”

Police officers at a Florida middle school carried out an active shooter drill in an effort to educate students about how to respond in the event of an actual shooting crisis. Two armed officers, guns loaded and drawn, burst into classrooms, terrorizing the students and placing the school into lockdown mode.

What is particularly chilling is how effective these lessons in compliance are in indoctrinating young people to accept their role in the police state, either as criminals or prison guards. If these exercises are intended to instill fear and compliance into young people, they’re working.

Sociologist Alice Goffman understands how far-reaching the impact of such “exercises” can be on young people. For six years, Goffman lived in a low-income urban neighborhood, documenting the impact such an environment—a microcosm of the police state—on its residents. Her account of neighborhood children playing cops and robbers speaks volumes about how constant exposure to pat downs, strip searches, surveillance and arrests can result in a populace that meekly allows itself to be prodded, poked and stripped.

As journalist Malcolm Gladwell writing for the New Yorker reports:

Goffman sometimes saw young children playing the age-old game of cops and robbers in the street, only the child acting the part of the robber wouldn’t even bother to run away: I saw children give up running and simply stick their hands behind their back, as if in handcuffs; push their body up against a car without being asked; or lie flat on the ground and put their hands over their head. The children yelled, “I’m going to lock you up! I’m going to lock you up, and you ain’t never coming home!” I once saw a six-year-old pull another child’s pants down to do a “cavity search.”

Clearly, our children are getting the message, but it’s not the message that was intended by those who fomented a revolution and wrote our founding documents. Their philosophy was that the police work for us, and “we the people” are the masters, and they are to be our servants. Now that has been turned on its head, fueled by our fears (some legitimate, some hyped along by the government and its media mouthpieces) about the terrors and terrorists that lurk among us.

It’s getting harder by the day to tell young people that we live in a nation that values freedom and which is governed by the rule of law without feeling like a teller of tall tales. Yet as I point out in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, unless something changes and soon for the young people growing up, there will be nothing left of freedom as we have known it but a fairy tale without a happy ending.

https://www.rutherford.org/publications ... lice_state
"A mind stretched by a new idea can never return to it's original dimensions." Oliver Wendell Holmes
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby backtoiam » Wed Oct 14, 2015 4:36 pm

When I was young cops could be spotted on their knees helping old folks change flat tires on their car. wtf...


TRIGGER WARNING. This video is graphic.

https://youtu.be/nBejm3r1zPc

This article updates the previous story on Matthew Ajibade’s death at the hands of police.

The involuntary manslaughter trial is currently underway for two former Chatham County Jail workers and a nurse. Deputy Jason Kenny, Deputy Maxine Evans, and Nurse Gregory Brown are charged with involuntary manslaughter in the murder of 21-year-old Matthew Ajibade. During the trial, at least two videos have been shown in court showing the beatings and abuse that lead to Matthew Ajibade’s death at the hands of police.

The newest video shown at trail takes place after Ajibade has been restrained and stripped down to his underwear. It shows Ajibade, who is restrained and unable to defend himself against these murderers, battered and bleeding as he is repeatedly tasered in his testicles – again, while he is restrained! The blood you see on Ajibade is the result of the psychotic deputies who delighted in the physical torture unleashed on Ajibade moments earlier. Though the video is shaky, Ajibade’s blood-curdling screams are unmistakable. Soon the video ends and Ajibade is left alone to die, murdered at the hands of police. Ajibade was found unresponsive almost two hours later, still strapped to the restraint chair in the cell and still wearing the spit mask they had placed over his face.
"A mind stretched by a new idea can never return to it's original dimensions." Oliver Wendell Holmes
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Re: Rise of the Warrior Cop

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Oct 16, 2015 10:58 am

DoD Orders Police Nationwide to Give Back Grenade Launchers, Bayonets, & Tanks
The entire process of issuing these weapons only to later recall them speaks to the sheer inefficient manner of the state.
By Matt Agorist / The Free Thought Project October 6, 2015


Over the past decade, police departments have been using the 1033 program to acquire these weapons of war.
Photo Credit: c/o The Free Thought Project

When you tell someone that their police department has bayonets, their immediate reaction is denial or ridicule. “Why would cops need bayonets?” they ask.

Exactly, why would cops need bayonets? Why do they need grenade launchers, .50 caliber rifles, Apache attack helicopters, camouflage uniforms, or tracked tank-like vehicles for that matter?

While there are multiple reasons public servants attempt to justify their need for weapons of war, the fact remains that they do have them and denying it, doesn’t change that fact.

Over the past decade, police departments have been using the 1033 program to acquire these weapons of war. The feds provided surplus military hardware to local police to fight a seeming war against its own citizens. These actions went unchecked and very little government, or public oversight existed.

Then when the events that took place in Ferguson beamed across the globe, the militarized U.S. police state revealed it’s ugly face to the world.

The images of the militarized police in Ferguson made clear that the days of Andy Griffith and Mayberry are a distant memory. They have been replaced by something that looks as if it belongs on a war-torn battlefield in Afghanistan or Iraq.

These revelations caused many to question why small police departments across the country were procuring mine-resistant armored personnel carriers, grenade launchers, and other weapons of war.

Because of backlash from the citizens, the federal government was forced to act. In January of this year, Obama signed Executive Order 13688. However, this EO appeared to have very little effect on the departments, and largely went ignored, until now.

On Thursday, however, police departments across the country were sent a memorandum that sets a deadline for them to return prohibited military equipment.

The memo references Recommendation 1.1 to EP 13688which prohibits the following items in police departments:

Tracked Armored Vehicles: Vehicles that provide ballistic protection to their occupants and utilize a tracked system instead of wheels for forward motion.

Weaponized Aircraft, Vessels, and Vehicles of Any Kind: These items will be prohibited from purchase or transfer with weapons installed.

Firearms of .50‐Caliber or Higher

Ammunition of .50‐Caliber or Higher

Grenade Launchers: Firearm or firearm accessory designed to launch small explosive projectiles.

Bayonets: Large knives designed to be attached to the muzzle of a rifle/shotgun/long gun for the purposes of hand‐to‐hand combat.

Camouflage Uniforms: Does not include woodland or desert patterns or solid color uniforms.

The memo states:

State and Local LEA’s are directed to return the following equipment to DLA (Defense Logistics Agency) Disposition Services.

Tracked Armored Vehicles
M-79 Grenade Launchers
Bayonets
The above items, according to the memo, are to be returned no later than April 1, 2016. Missing from this memo, however, are .50 caliber firearms, camouflage, and weaponized aircraft.

The entire process of issuing these weapons only to later recall them speaks to the sheer inefficient manner of the state. As if there would ever be a scenario in which police would need to affix bayonets to protect the public at large; yet departments across the country have acquired thousands of them.

While this memo is a start, it does nothing to address the unaccountable and brutal nature of police in America. A police officer does not need a grenade launcher nor a bayonet to violently assault an innocent mother in front of her children.

If the federal government were genuinely concerned with addressing the policing problem in the US, they would end the war on drugs. They would stop enforcing victimless crimes altogether. However, it appears that law enforcement is nowhere near ready to give up their ability to throw morally innocent people in cages or extort money from them as this is what justifies their entire existence.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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