Police just executed an unarmed 17 yr old brotha (shot 10 times)

The site of the murder...Canfield Drive

"Damn"
BwTLMhkCMAAunv1.jpg
 
At least 6 Ferguson officers apart from Brown shooter have been named in lawsuits



Federal investigators are focused on one Ferguson, Mo., police officer who fatally shot an unarmed black teenager, but at least six other police officers in the town’s 53-member department have been named in civil rights lawsuits alleging the use of excessive force.

In four federal lawsuits, including one that is on appeal, and more than a half-dozen investigations over the past decade, colleagues of Darren Wilson’s have separately contested a variety of allegations, including killing a mentally-ill man with a Taser, pistol-whipping a child, choking and hog-tying a child and beating a man who was later charged with destroying city property because his blood spilled on officers’ clothes.

One officer has faced three internal affairs probes and two lawsuits over claims he violated civil rights and used excessive force while working at a previous police department in the mid-2000s. That department demoted him after finding credible evidence to support one of the complaints, and he subsequently was hired by the Ferguson force.

Police officials from outside Ferguson and plaintiffs’ lawyers say the nature of such cases suggests there is a systemic problem within the Ferguson police force. Department of Justice officials said they are considering a broader probe into whether there is a pattern of using excessive force that routinely violates people’s civil rights.

Counting Wilson, whose shooting of Michael Brown on Aug. 9 set off a firestorm of protests and a national debate on race and policing, approximately 13 percent of Ferguson’s officers have faced excessive-force investigations. Comparable national data on excessive force probes is not available. But the National Police Misconduct Statistics and Reporting Project, funded by the libertarian Cato Institute, estimated on the basis of 2010 data that about 1*percent of U.S. police officers — 9.8 out of every 1,000 — will be cited for or charged with misconduct. Half of those cases involve excessive force.

The Ferguson Police Department and city officials declined to comment on the cases.

In all but one of the cases, the victims were black. Among the six officers involved in the cases, one is African American.

Ferguson has plenty of company when it comes to federal scrutiny of police departments.

Under Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., the Justice Department has initiated twice as many reviews of police departments for possible constitutional violations as the next most prolific of his predecessors. At least 34 other departments are under investigation for alleged civil rights violations.

But Clarence Harmon, a former St. Louis mayor and city police chief, said the number and types of allegations in Ferguson set the city’s department apart.

“The cases themselves are fairly extraordinary — so is the volume,” said Harmon, who in 1997 became the second black mayor of the city. “It’s prima facie evidence of discriminatory practices. I would be surprised if Justice didn’t make a recommendation that they be placed under scrutiny.”

James O. Pasco Jr., national executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, cautions that police officers are constantly accused of using excessive and that those accusations are just “one side of the story” and do not tell exactly what happened. In 90*percent of cases in which a department has a systemic problem, the issue is with poor management, not the individual officers, he said.

“To suggest that police officers are a marauding, white occupying army out there to deprive minorities of their civil rights is at variance with common sense,” Pasco said. “You can’t have rogue officers in a well-managed police department.”(this is what I saw.... spider705)

The six officers have faced complaints of excessive force in five civil rights lawsuits; one of the suits was resolved with the officer’s not being held liable and the department paying a settlement, and four are pending, one on appeal. Two of the officers faced these complaints during their time at other police departments. One officer allegedly used excessive force in two incidents, both while at the Ferguson Police Department.

Samuel Bagenstos, a former Justice Department attorney who helped oversee the civil rights division for the Obama administration from 2009 to 2011, said a federal probe into potentially systemic problems within a police force would consider hiring practices as one of several factors.

“They would look at whether they are properly screening people that they are considering to hire,” said Bagenstos, now a professor of law at the University of Michigan.

The most recent civil rights lawsuit naming Ferguson police officers was filed days after Brown was shot and involves a September 2011 incident.

According to the lawsuit, officers encountered a dazed-looking man walking from behind a building in a residential area. Officer Brian Kaminski ordered 31-year-old Jason Moore to put his hands up and walk toward him, according to the suit, which then alleges that Kaminski fired his Taser prongs into Moore’s chest and legs.

A second officer, Michael White, arrived and physically held Moore while Kaminski repeatedly Tasered him with electric currents, the lawsuit said.

Both officers are white. Moore was black.

Moore, who had a mental disorder, suffered a heart attack on the scene and died. His wife, Tina Moore, filed the lawsuit, saying her husband’s death was another example of Ferguson police using excessive force.


“There was no need for the officers’ excessive use of force in continuing to Taser Jason Moore in order to preserve the peace, maintain order or to overcome any resistance to authority by Jason Moore,” says the suit, which names Ferguson Mayor James Knowles and Chief Thomas Jackson.

“Rather than applying the appropriate level of force required to restrain Jason Moore, Officer Kaminski, with the assistance of Officer White, instead Tasered Jason Moore until he became unresponsive and died,” the suit continues.

Tina Moore’s attorney, Mark Floyd, declined to comment on the case. Peter Dunne, an attorney recently assigned to represent the officers, also declined to comment, saying he has yet to review the case since it was just filed.

Dunne is also representing White in a case that involves two other Ferguson officers. A 54-year-old welder, Henry Davis, was injured in an altercation with the three officers. Officers say it happened because Davis became combative, which Davis denies. The officers charged Davis with destruction of property when his blood stained their uniforms. Davis is black. The officers are white.

The other two officers — John Beaird and Kim Tihen — testified that Davis initiated the fight. Davis testified that he asked for a mat to sleep on in the jail cell, a request he said was denied. When he protested, he said, the officers started to hit him, then handcuffed him. White, Davis said, kicked him in the head. Medical records show he suffered a concussion.

The judge said that Davis, who was arrested for allegedly driving under the influence and other violations, suffered injuries but that they were “de minimis” — too minor to warrant a finding of excessive force, records show. The case is being appealed.

Davis’s attorney, James W. Schottel Jr., said he believes his client will ultimately prevail because he is introducing new evidence to show that his client’s concussion is a serious injury.

Dunne disagreed about the merits of Davis’s case: “What I would say is, he got turned down at every point. . . . Not a single thing he sued for [was] allowed to go forward to the jury.”

Dunne also represents the Ferguson officer who faced at least five complaints of excessive force when he worked at the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department.

Eddie Boyd III arrived in Ferguson four years ago after three internal affairs investigations into complaints — in 2004, 2005 and 2006 — that he assaulted and injured children without cause.

Boyd and the children are African American. In at least two cases, the children said Boyd pistol-whipped them. In the 2006 case, the department “sustained” the allegations, concluding that Boyd had used unnecessary force when he struck 12-year-old Jerica Thornton with his pistol, records show.

Boyd was suspended and demoted to the rank of a probationary police officer. But the next year, Christopher Dixon, a high school freshman, said Boyd tackled him as he fled an after-school fight and hit him in the face with the butt of his pistol. Boyd said he accidentally hit Dixon’s face with his handcuffs when Dixon resisted arrest, records show.

Boyd resigned from the St. Louis force shortly after this incident, saying in a deposition he wanted to avoid the “red tape” of what would have been his fourth internal affairs probe. Boyd was not held liable in the Dixon suit. His police department settled out of court, paying the teenager $35,000, according to Dixon’s attorney, Matthew Devoti.

Another lawsuit filed against Boyd alleging he assaulted a suspect is pending.

“I think it’s incorrect and misleading to say that he is a guy with a record when he denied that he acted improperly in all of these cases,” Dunne said. “In two of these [internal affairs] cases, they were found to not have any merit at all.”

Another Ferguson officer faced a complaint on a previous job.

Justin Cosma was one of two Jefferson County sheriff’s deputies who in June 2010 came upon a shirtless 12-year-old boy who was checking the family mailbox. The deputies asked him what he was doing, knocked him down, and hogtied him, and the boy was choked and beaten, the lawsuit claims. The officers and the boy are white.

When asked about the accusations, Cosma’s attorney, Jason Retter, said he does not comment on pending cases.

Cosma was one of the officers who arrested reporters, including a Washington Post journalist, covering the protests in Ferguson over the killing of Michael Brown.

In the Jefferson County incident, Cosma filed a report that the 12-year-old assaulted him and his partner and was “resisting/interfering with arrest, detention or stop.” The local prosecutor refused to bring charges against the juvenile.

“They were talking to him and the next thing that happens is they are restraining him,” said the lawyer for the boy’s family, Richard Lozano. “Because he was shirtless, he was grabbed around the neck. He had choke marks. They tied his hands and feet behind his back, and hogtied him — all on his property, all while his mother was inside the house.”



I’m just out here working hard every single day, just trying to be the best poster I can be....
 
Last edited:
^^^^^^Real talk....politically...Ferguson is a cotdamm embarrassment....
We need to wake da fuck up....letting folks with white skin run our politics when we re the majority populations in those town....

let alone asians arabs and koreans controlling our economy with THEIR businesses.....

A lot if this we need to look in the mirror and get right and get these other skins out of our community....
 
shane
spider

we need more like y'all

everyone that's stayed on this shit, stayed objective and on task

thank you guys so much.

i really believe we can save us.

Thank you. Peace to you and yours.

Ferguson in my opinion is an A&B test. Marketers know what I'm talking about.

For those who don't know, one variant is like running a bubble bath for your woman, and checking the water to make sure it's not too hot. I suppose the other is white people's reaction.

That is what they are doing.

And at the top, people have known this for awhile, these people are willing to take 1 step forward, and 2 steps backs. Until the steps are finished.
 
Or...or that faggots face wasn't swollen at all and just did it after the fact to gain sympathy and to fit the story on why he killed him.

Sent from my TouchPad using Tapatalk

A lot of people had this same thought in the beginning. Anything is possible.

Camille this is what I've ALWAYS thought.

If he violently and aggressively and forcefully tried to open a door, the force generated when or if it hits a stationary object, ricocheting back to it's closed position would be enough to knock a person out.

Based on the eye witness statements that we've heard so far we know that Wilson was the aggressor. He was probably half out the door when it flew back closed and hit him in the head.

I’m just out here working hard every single day, just trying to be the best poster I can be....

Great minds think alike. :yes:

Trust me with the length of time it took to get the hospital report out.....they can get some clinician to say "swollen face" cause its not easy to prove that someone is lying about that....the excuse they ll use even on the witness stand is "what one person thinks is a swollen face another may not. Its my clinical professional opinion."

And the court will back off.......so the hospital is most likely lying about the swollen face.

I figure there will have been pictures taken at the hospital. They weren't overly eager to file an incident report, but I'm sure they were very eager to document everything down to a hang nail that Wilson had on that day. He didn't have major injuries because he was on site a few hours afterward, but I do honestly believe he had some injury, I just don't think it was inflicted by Mike Brown.
 
A lot of people had this same thought in the beginning. Anything is possible.



Great minds think alike. :yes:



I figure there will have been pictures taken at the hospital. They weren't overly eager to file an incident report, but I'm sure they were very eager to document everything down to a hang nail that Wilson had on that day. He didn't have major injuries because he was on site a few hours afterward, but I do honestly believe he had some injury, I just don't think it was inflicted by Mike Brown.

Pictures....they ll be fabricated.....easily....and most likely if they appear....they ll were taken after the hospital stay......

I m trying to tell you ....one thing the hospital is......its a whore....and will prostitute itself for money...i.e. local government money.....donations....police protection....etc....

and a hospital is one of the most corrupt organizations in the community.....usually.
 
I figure there will have been pictures taken at the hospital. They weren't overly eager to file an incident report, but I'm sure they were very eager to document everything down to a hang nail that Wilson had on that day. He didn't have major injuries because he was on site a few hours afterward, but I do honestly believe he had some injury, I just don't think it was inflicted by Mike Brown.


But no, they are MORE eager to claim what violent potential Michael Brown had, than true PROOF of that potential against a man with a FIREARM!

Plainly, if the officer was so physical damaged it would have been out that night. Which is what you said.


Now let's move forward, because IF Wilson had any, I say ANY damage, IT would have been put out.

Zimmerman showed a scratch.

Think on it.
 
But no, they are MORE eager to claim what violent potential Michael Brown had, than true PROOF of that potential against a man with a FIREARM!

Plainly, if the officer was so physical damaged it would have been out that night. Which is what you said.


Now let's move forward, because IF Wilson had any, I say ANY damage, IT would have been put out.

Zimmerman showed a scratch.

Think on it.
Those pics would've been out on da first day. Quickly.
 
But no, they are MORE eager to claim what violent potential Michael Brown had, than true PROOF of that potential against a man with a FIREARM!

Plainly, if the officer was so physical damaged it would have been out that night. Which is what you said.


Now let's move forward, because IF Wilson had any, I say ANY damage, IT would have been put out.

Zimmerman showed a scratch.

Think on it.

I was thinking the same thing

But with how secretive and how covered up everything had been, you don't know what he had after. He could have easily gone to a relative or friend and said hit me. Then claimed his face swelled up the next day and went to the hospital. Claimed adrenalin or shock caused him not to notice or something.

Look at the video of him walking around the body, he wasn't holding or touching his face. :dunno:
 
We need to be aggressive and capitalize at every angle

No disrespect intended, but have you blown up any police stations or burned down white businesses yet? I see a lot of people wanting to take extreme action, but I haven't seen one i.e.d. go off. This isn't directed at you good brother, but if we want to head down this path, someone has to have the stones to light the match.
 
"@KenKlippenstein: The powerful are terrified of #Ferguson protests. Just look at what NYT said."
1:37am - 31 Aug 14 "
BwWOwWZIUAEo4LR.png





At Ferguson March, Call to Halt Traffic in Labor Day Highway Protest

By MANNY FERNANDEZ and CAMPBELL ROBERTSON
AUGUST 30, 2014
FERGUSON, Mo. — Activists on Saturday called for mass civil disobedience on the highways in and around this St. Louis suburb to protest the killing of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer, with the leaders of one coalition encouraging supporters to stop their cars to tie up traffic on Labor Day.

The appeal came at a peaceful if at times tense march and rally on Saturday that drew what appeared to be well more than 1,000 demonstrators to some of the same Ferguson streets where the police clashed with protesters in the days after the killing of Michael Brown. Mr. Brown, 18, was shot Aug. 9 by Officer Darren Wilson of the Ferguson Police Department, and his bloody body lay on Canfield Drive for about four and a half hours before it was removed.

Organizers at the rally called on demonstrators to drive on Interstate 70 and other area highways at 4:30 p.m. Monday, turn their hazard lights on and stop their vehicles for four and a half minutes to symbolize the four and a half hours that Mr. Brown’s body lay in the street.

“We’re going to tie it down, lock it down,” Anthony Shahid, one of the lead organizers of the rally, told supporters from the stage at a park. The following week, if the coalition’s demands were not met, including that Officer Wilson be fired and arrested on charges of murder, another four-minute traffic shutdown would occur on two days instead of just one, he said.

“I want the highways shut down,” he said of the Monday protest. “I know it’s a holiday, but it won’t be no good holiday.”

Mr. Shahid’s announcement was met with applause by many marchers, but it was unclear how many people would take part. Only a few hundred demonstrators were in the park when Mr. Shahid made the appeal, and another organizer suggested that the plan for Monday could change because the action was still under discussion. It was also unclear what the authorities intended to do in response to the civil disobedience plan.

“There will be an appropriate, measured response based on conditions, but we cannot discuss the specifics of operational plans,” said Mike O’Connell, a spokesman for the Missouri Department of Public Safety.

The march and rally were organized by a coalition of black activists and leaders largely from the St. Louis region, including state legislators, lawyers, and representatives of the Nation of Islam, the N.A.A.C.P., the New Black Panther Party and the Green Party. Organizers with the group, called the Justice for Michael Brown Leadership Coalition, said they wanted Saturday’s event to be peaceful and had coordinated with city, county and police officials. They estimated the crowd at 10,000. For much of the event, the police had a light presence compared with the show of force seen at other protests.

“They’ve already seen the whole world look at the missteps that they made, how they handled the black community like an army going to war in Iraq,” said Akbar Muhammad, an organizer of the demonstration and a top aide to Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam. “If they had any sense, they will handle it in a tactful manner.”

The march on Saturday showed how difficult it may be to direct the actions of a young, decentralized and assertive protest movement. A mile into Saturday’s demonstration, the march seemed to split, with some heading to a scheduled rally in a public park and others insisting that the marchers continue to the Ferguson police station. Few seemed to know whether the turn into the park was the plan all along or an unscheduled deviation, and several marchers began a chant of “Ain’t no justice in the park!”

“If they stop here a lot of people will feel misled,” said Trinette Buck, 40. She said that the younger protesters were not waiting on leadership, nor were they concerned about what might happen if things turned ugly at the police station.

“There is no fear anymore,” she said. “It’s either stand up or die.”

A few marchers began heading to the police department without waiting for official word, peeling off in small groups and walking along the shoulder for two miles of road, drawing supportive honks from cars along the way. By the time the main body of the march, as well as the demonstration’s leaders, arrived at the police station, well more than a 100 had already gathered and were chanting in a somewhat tense face-to-face confrontation with a line of police officers.

Shortly after 5 p.m., one of the marchers who had been taunting the police line was surrounded by law enforcement officers and was apparently placed under arrest. It was unclear why.
 
Last edited:
No disrespect intended, but have you blown up any police stations or burned down white businesses yet? I see a lot of people wanting to take extreme action, but I haven't seen one i.e.d. go off. This isn't directed at you good brother, but if we want to head down this path, someone has to have the stones to light the match.

I'm not talking physical aggression
I'm talking about being aggressive wit our intelligence.
Remaining consistent, not going off track mainly by TRUSTING AND BELIEVING the government.
Cause u know they go pad us on the back n say more on

We need to be aggressive at every angle withing thier angles. We must keep the same goal we started with and not let the government and their speeches divert our energy.
If we keep this up, the change will keep on happening
White supremacy uses intelligence
And I believe we can be a step ahead by not being MOVED by their rehearsed and practiced public appearences
 
But no, they are MORE eager to claim what violent potential Michael Brown had, than true PROOF of that potential against a man with a FIREARM!

Plainly, if the officer was so physical damaged it would have been out that night. Which is what you said.


Now let's move forward, because IF Wilson had any, I say ANY damage, IT would have been put out.

Zimmerman showed a scratch.

Think on it.

a FUCKIN scratch!

Man you telling the gospel damn truth with that one. And that scratch equated to a concussion, a gash, a open wound.....shit.....let then tell it you could see brain tissue and Zimmerman is lucky to still be alive and not a functioning vegetable! :smh:

That's some new ammo right there big homie.....:cheers:

I’m just out here working hard every single day, just trying to be the best poster I can be....
 
At Ferguson March, Call to Halt Traffic in Labor Day Highway Protest

By MANNY FERNANDEZ and CAMPBELL ROBERTSON
AUGUST 30, 2014
FERGUSON, Mo. — Activists on Saturday called for mass civil disobedience on the highways in and around this St. Louis suburb to protest the killing of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer, with the leaders of one coalition encouraging supporters to stop their cars to tie up traffic on Labor Day.

The appeal came at a peaceful if at times tense march and rally on Saturday that drew what appeared to be well more than 1,000 demonstrators to some of the same Ferguson streets where the police clashed with protesters in the days after the killing of Michael Brown. Mr. Brown, 18, was shot Aug. 9 by Officer Darren Wilson of the Ferguson Police Department, and his bloody body lay on Canfield Drive for about four and a half hours before it was removed.

Organizers at the rally called on demonstrators to drive on Interstate 70 and other area highways at 4:30 p.m. Monday, turn their hazard lights on and stop their vehicles for four and a half minutes to symbolize the four and a half hours that Mr. Brown’s body lay in the street.

“We’re going to tie it down, lock it down,” Anthony Shahid, one of the lead organizers of the rally, told supporters from the stage at a park. The following week, if the coalition’s demands were not met, including that Officer Wilson be fired and arrested on charges of murder, another four-minute traffic shutdown would occur on two days instead of just one, he said.

“I want the highways shut down,” he said of the Monday protest. “I know it’s a holiday, but it won’t be no good holiday.”

Mr. Shahid’s announcement was met with applause by many marchers, but it was unclear how many people would take part. Only a few hundred demonstrators were in the park when Mr. Shahid made the appeal, and another organizer suggested that the plan for Monday could change because the action was still under discussion. It was also unclear what the authorities intended to do in response to the civil disobedience plan.

“There will be an appropriate, measured response based on conditions, but we cannot discuss the specifics of operational plans,” said Mike O’Connell, a spokesman for the Missouri Department of Public Safety.

The march and rally were organized by a coalition of black activists and leaders largely from the St. Louis region, including state legislators, lawyers, and representatives of the Nation of Islam, the N.A.A.C.P., the New Black Panther Party and the Green Party. Organizers with the group, called the Justice for Michael Brown Leadership Coalition, said they wanted Saturday’s event to be peaceful and had coordinated with city, county and police officials. They estimated the crowd at 10,000. For much of the event, the police had a light presence compared with the show of force seen at other protests.

“They’ve already seen the whole world look at the missteps that they made, how they handled the black community like an army going to war in Iraq,” said Akbar Muhammad, an organizer of the demonstration and a top aide to Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam. “If they had any sense, they will handle it in a tactful manner.”

The march on Saturday showed how difficult it may be to direct the actions of a young, decentralized and assertive protest movement. A mile into Saturday’s demonstration, the march seemed to split, with some heading to a scheduled rally in a public park and others insisting that the marchers continue to the Ferguson police station. Few seemed to know whether the turn into the park was the plan all along or an unscheduled deviation, and several marchers began a chant of “Ain’t no justice in the park!”

“If they stop here a lot of people will feel misled,” said Trinette Buck, 40. She said that the younger protesters were not waiting on leadership, nor were they concerned about what might happen if things turned ugly at the police station.

“There is no fear anymore,” she said. “It’s either stand up or die.”

A few marchers began heading to the police department without waiting for official word, peeling off in small groups and walking along the shoulder for two miles of road, drawing supportive honks from cars along the way. By the time the main body of the march, as well as the demonstration’s leaders, arrived at the police station, well more than a 100 had already gathered and were chanting in a somewhat tense face-to-face confrontation with a line of police officers.

Shortly after 5 p.m., one of the marchers who had been taunting the police line was surrounded by law enforcement officers and was apparently placed under arrest. It was unclear why.
 
Back
Top