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Black hero shot by California cop in 2022 calls for hate crime charges amid racist text messages
  • It would be pretty fucked up if you found a young VIncent D'Onofrio and hit him in the mouth based on this.

  • San Jose cop who shot good guy in 2022 is fired for racist text messages
  • And I say bring it.

    Fought these cunts once over slavery, willing to fight again over gun control when we have mass shootings every day of the week.

  • San Jose cop who shot good guy in 2022 is fired for racist text messages
  • There are a lot of well-meaning liberals who have been instrumental in taking guns out of the hands of… Pretty much, exclusively themselves. Most right-wing gun nuts already have their guns, they won’t be giving them up anytime soon, and the American gun culture is incomparable to most other countries. If we could start over, less guns would work, but unfortunately we can’t.

    Your whole argument boils down to "we haven't done it yet so we can't do it." That's stupid. We can "start over" right now. If you think that a bunch of Southern nutjobs can just hold the entire country hostage, well, I have a civil war to show you.

    The notion that we're incomparable to other countries just because we have a high concentration of morons doesn't mean a lot to me.

  • Reporter gets $700,000 settlement from L.A. County after she was thrown to the ground, pinned, handcuffed and arrested covering 2020 police riots
  • Police departments offer massive settlements because it never comes out of police budgets and if the case is settled then they never have to address the harm they continue to cause.

  • San Jose cop who shot good guy in 2022 is fired for racist text messages
  • The only-government-can-have-guns crowd pushes inaccurate perceptions to advance the agenda.

    I'm curious about what inaccurate perceptions you think they're pushing and what their agenda is. The inaccurate perception that we're the only country in the world with this amount of resource who are facing this problem? Is their agenda... preventing needless death?

  • Indian cop arrested for firing at crowd after collision, allegedly shoots himself at police station
  • ACAB no matter where you hail from. Our "justice" system is just more adept at shielding them from consequence. If this were a US cop who fired his service weapon above a crowd he'd get two days paid vacation and a promotion six months down the line.

  • Arbitrating Chicago police terminations could result in a ‘decade of police impunity’
  • Who the fuck looks at the state of policing in the US and thinks "what we need is less transparency"? Or that we're holding officers TOO accountable?

    ... Oh yeah, cops.

  • In city hall raid, feds seize documents from Texas town's police department
  • That article was a wild ride.

    Police chief in the mid-90's in my town was the subject of an FBI investigation for taking cash bribes to look the other way with similar gambling machines. He spent 14 months in prison and then went on to collect a police pension for two decades. 💀

  • Massachusetts cop charged with child porn is suspended by 'police watchdog'
  • The POST commission is interesting. As of 10/31 they've suspended 39 LEOs, 38 of which list the reason as MGL c. 6E § 9(a)(1), which is "The commission shall immediately suspend the certification of any officer who is arrested, charged or indicted for a felony. " So the vast majority of suspensions stem from the officers copping felony charges.

    The outlier is Blake Poore with M.G.L. c. 6E, § 9(a)(4), "The commission may, pending preliminary inquiry pursuant to paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of section 8, suspend the certification of any officer if the commission determines by a preponderance of the evidence that the suspension is in the best interest of the health, safety or welfare of the public." Apparently he was suspended for taking LSD. Frankly, as long as he wasn't on the job while he was taking it, the experience would have probably made him a more empathetic and self-aware cop.

    POST also maintains a csv of historical police disciplinary data that they update monthly. Right now it's available as a series of PDFs or a CSV on their website, but I've put the whole thing in a PostgreSQL database and I'm working on an API etc. Hoping to have a version you can search by officer, agency, date, etc. through a web app within a week or two.

  • Retired Pennsylvania cop gets 17 years in prison, for ten counts of using a computer to solicit a child
  • I haven't read a lot about this, and the article linked here is pretty light on details, but it may be related to him being a school resource officer, or possibly the search they did at his home. But that's also all speculation, so don't really know.

  • Retired Pennsylvania cop gets 17 years in prison, for ten counts of using a computer to solicit a child
  • I'm sorry if I seemed like I was trying to pick a fight, I wasn't being disingenuous when I asked.

  • Kansas cop is decertified after domestic battery case
  • This gives me hope. The state I live in (MA) finally has a POST database, but it's a work in progress at best.

    The current version of the police watchdog agency’s database, which contains about 3,400 sustained complaints against still-active officers going back to the 1980s, features only 13 complaints of racial or ethnic bias, involving 11 officers.

    So yeah, 13 complaints about racial bias since the 80's sounds... generous.

  • In-custody hanging death reported at California jail
  • Just the other day there was a post here about a California prison guard sexually assaulting female inmates, confessing to the crime, and we still had comments ... supporting the guard? At the very least, victim-blaming:

    On the other hand, the ones claiming to be sexually assaulted are hardly the best people themselves, so you have to take their stories with a fair amount of salt.

    And that's a huge part of the problem. Some people, especially in the US, just don't give a shit about anyone in the system. These same idiots also fail to realize that at any moment of their small, boring lives they could also be carted off to prison for a crime they didn't commit. It happens all the time, every day.

    We need real investigations, and we need the general public to put pressure on state attorneys to actually investigate and file charges.

  • Retired Pennsylvania cop gets 17 years in prison, for ten counts of using a computer to solicit a child
  • May I ask why you think that sentence is excessively long? It's ten counts. I don't know anything about VA law, but in some states the maximum sentence for one count of child solicitation is five years, so it could have been a lot longer.

    Edit: changed PA to VA whoops

  • Portland expected to pay $300k to settle 2020 police brutality lawsuit by protester
  • Man, I just spent this morning looking up the officer who (illegally) denied one of my FOIA requests. Turns out he was terminated for falsifying detail slips and lying about it (he was paid for an eight hour shift monitoring traffic at a construction project but spent 6 of those hours at town hall doing something for the police union and then tried to cover it up). Well, somehow he got reinstated with back pay to the tune of $500k. EVEN THAT came out of the town's general budget and not the police department budget-- backpay for police wages. Absurd.

    Edit: Since his reinstatement in 2018 he's been promoted multiple times and is now the Deputy Police Chief rofl

  • Idaho cop chases, finds, and shoots suicidal man; authorities won't even say what agency the cop works for
  • Look, you have a stupid, shitty view probably informed by your lack of real world experience (I'm assuming you still live with your parents, probably hidden away in the basement) but where did this start? What's your life like, man? Please tell us, because no rational person would take your stance.

  • Idaho cop chases, finds, and shoots suicidal man; authorities won't even say what agency the cop works for
  • Is this a real take or a bad attempt at trolling? I get that you've said in your other posts that you're "neurodivergent" but you can diverge your ass the fuck out of here..

  • Prisons and jails are violent; they don’t have to be.
  • Living in a Restoring Promise unit during their incarceration decreased young adults’ odds of being convicted of a violent infraction by 73 percent.

    This is huge. It might seem like common sense to us, but I love that they're actually doing studies on this. Unfortunately, the prison industrial complex as a whole encourages recidivism -- otherwise they don't get paid.

    I do feel like they may have buried the lede a little bit here, though.

    And finally, although it is necessary to improve current conditions, the most effective way to heal families and communities while also reducing the number of people behind bars in overcrowded environments is decarceration. On any given day, more than 400,000 people are detained pretrial. Many remain jailed not because of the danger they pose to their communities but simply because they cannot afford bail. According to research by the Brennan Center for Justice in 2016, nearly 40 percent of the U.S. prison population—576,000 people—were behind bars for no compelling public safety reason. Bail and sentencing reforms are a few of the many necessary changes that would help reduce jail and prison populations.

    Fix disgusting bail systems that only benefit the wealthy and you can help protect communities. Not exactly a shocker.

  • Use a free streaming site to listen to your local PD's radio comms. [US]
    www.broadcastify.com Broadcastify - Live Police, Fire, EMS, Aircraft, and Rail Audio Feeds

    The world's largest source of public safety, aircraft, rail, and marine radio live audio streams

    Broadcastify - Live Police, Fire, EMS, Aircraft, and Rail Audio Feeds

    I got asked this question a couple times when mentioning that I always have the police radio playing at home.

    There are a lot of (totally legal!) ways to listen in on your local gang in blue's radio communications, but the easiest is to use Broadcastify.com, a service run by RadioReference (awesome boomer RF resource). It's free, works pretty well, and is so easy to get running that your ACAB grandma could figure it out.

    Click your state, scroll or Ctrl+F for your locality, then click play. Police channels, fire channels, public safety, etc.

    If the department you're looking for isn't listed it may be for a couple reasons. If they're using encryption in addition to just digital trunking, then it's unlikely anyone will be streaming them to Broadcastify. But if they don't use encryption (and you can use RadioReference to look up what system every PD is using!) it may just be that no one is currently streaming that specific PD. Maybe it's a really small town, or maybe the person streaming it before is under arrest lmao.

    Which is actually excellent, because now you can learn about RTL-SDR and start capturing their radio yourself! Gone are the days when you need to drop $500 on a police scanner just to handle trunking. You can spend less than $30 on an RTL-SDR dongle and couple that with free software. The actual set-up is beyond the scope of this quick post, but there are a lot of articles out there on how to do it, and it's really fun.

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    This cop detector alerts you to nearby police.
    github.com GitHub - judcrandall/lookout.py: A simple Python script for detecting nearby Axon law enforcement equipment using Bluetooth Low Energy.

    A simple Python script for detecting nearby Axon law enforcement equipment using Bluetooth Low Energy. - GitHub - judcrandall/lookout.py: A simple Python script for detecting nearby Axon law enforc...

    GitHub - judcrandall/lookout.py: A simple Python script for detecting nearby Axon law enforcement equipment using Bluetooth Low Energy.

    I watched a couple really interesting talks from this past Def Con. In one of the talks, Snoop Unto Them As They Snoop Unto Us, Null Agent points out that all Axon equipment (the company putting tasers on drones) share the same organizationally unique identifier (OUI) and communicate via Bluetooth Low Energy. When you pull your firearm or taser from an Axon holster, it can be set up to signal your bodycam to automatically turn on, for example. So by snooping on the BLE data channels you can look for Axon's OUI and infer that a law enforcement officer is within your Bluetooth range (max 300ft or so in optimal conditions).

    !

    That's all this script does. If it detects Axon equipment it plays a sound, alerts on your terminal, and logs the MAC address / time of encounter. I run it on my laptop in my living room with a super cheap Bluetooth adapter and I get notified when there are cops outside. Couple this with listening to your local police / public safety radio and you'll never be surprised by a no-knock again.

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    JudCrandall JudCrandall @lemmy.world

    Hi, here's a command line police detector. :)

    Posts 3
    Comments 63