In de VS, het land van de ‘ongekende mogelijkheden’ is de politie corrupt, ongehoord dom en schietgraag……. Voor de zoveelste keer blijken agenten met hun ‘bodycam’ (een camera die op hun jas of shirt ‘is gespeld’) een misdaad van hen zelf te hebben vastgelegd…….
Dit keer was het de politie van LA, ofwel de LAPD, een corps dat bekend staat om de alom aanwezige corruptie, was 1 agent zo ongelofelijk dom dat deze opnames maakte, terwijl hij cocaïne in de portefeuille stopte van iemand die men staande had gehouden…….
Ondanks de opnames houden de agenten hun verhaal vol en stellen dat de coke uit de zak van de staande gehouden persoon was gevallen…….
Ongelofelijk dat Nederland nog steeds zelfs eigen onderdanen uitlevert aan de VS…… De VS het ‘land’ waar je als verdachte vaak beter kan bekennen, ook al heb je iets niet gedaan, daar je anders grote kans loopt op een hoge gevangenisstraf, ‘plea bargain’ noemt men dat……. De VS het ‘land’ waar nog steeds de doodstraf wordt uitgevoerd……. De VS waar de gekleurde minderheid onevenredig veel vaker in de gevangenis zit, dan de witte bevolking……. De VS het ‘land’ waar vergeleken met elk ander land, ongelofelijk veel meer mensen in de gevangenis zitten……. De VS het ‘land’ waar het gevangenissysteem voor een groot deel is geprivatiseerd en zelfs aan de beurs genoteerd staat, kortom waar de gevangenisleiding moet zorgen dat de gevangenis zo vol mogelijk zit……. De VS, het land waar agenten jaarlijks duizenden mensen doodschieten en dat veelal volkomen onnodig en zelfs totaal onterecht……..
Kortom zoals u kon lezen: de VS ‘het land’ van de ongekende mogelijkheden………
Watch:
Cops Accidentally Film Themselves Planting Cocaine in a Man’s
Wallet
November
16, 2017 at 1:09 pm
Written
by Carey
Wedler
(ANTIMEDIA) Los
Angeles, CA — LAPD
officers appear to
have accidentally recorded themselves planting drugs on a suspect in
an arrest made back in April. Though it’s not exactly clear where
the drugs originated, the police report and officers’ testimonies
differ from what their body camera footage shows.
Last
week, CBS
Los Angeles published the
body camera footage from 12 different angles in the first instance
where LAPD has released video from their officers since the body
camera program began two years ago. The footage shows multiple
officers arresting Ronald Shields, who was eventually charged with a
felony hit and run, having a gun in the trunk of his car, and cocaine
possession.
The
police report clearly states they found the cocaine in Shield’s
left pocket, but the video shows a different sequence of events. As
Officer Samuel Lee restrains and searches Shields, another, Officer
Gaxiola, picks up Shields’ wallet from the sidewalk and shows it to
Lee, who motions that it belongs to Shields. Gaxiola bends over, puts
it back on the ground, and picks up a small green bag of white powder
off the street, then picks up the wallet, and “appears to put the
bag in the wallet,” CBS reports.
Addressing
the seemingly irrational action of an officer filming themselves
planting drugs, CBS notes that though Gaxiola
activated his camera after putting the cocaine in the wallet, he may
not have known that the camera automatically saves 30 seconds of
footage without audio prior to the officer manually turning on the
camera.
In
court, the officers stuck to the story they reported in the police
summary of events.
“[Lee]
looked dumbstruck to me. Period. He had really no answers,”
said Steve Levine, an attorney for Shields, while discussing Lee’s
testimony. Gaxiola had not yet testified at the time of CBS’
report, but both officers told the outlet they had no comment on the
disparity between the police report and the footage.
Lee
claims the drugs ended up on the ground because they fell out of
Shields’ pocket, but Levine argued in the court that Gaxiola
planted the drugs entirely. However, the judge was unconvinced by
Levine’s theory.
Even
so, as Vox observed, at the very least:
“It’s
possible…that the cops tried to reenact the act of finding the
cocaine for the cameras. But that is still very deceptive — and
when so clearly caught on video, it makes it hard to trust the police
officers with just about everything else they’re doing. It makes a
potentially credible case lose all credibility.”
According
to a statement from LAPD, a department known for
corruption and abuse:
“The
LAPD takes all allegations of misconduct seriously and, as in all
cases, will conduct a thorough investigation.”
Officers
in other parts of the country have also accidentally filmed
themselves planting drugs. In Baltimore, multiple instances of this
type of misconduct led prosecutors to drop
numerous charges and
cases earlier this year.