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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Undercover NYPD Cops that murdered Kimani Gray had history of abuse


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3sNGhlQ4lY


The 2 cops that shot 16 year old Kimani Gray to death had a history of abusing minorities. The city paid out almost a quarter of a million dollars to settle 3 law suits against the cops for civil rights violations and allowed them to go right back out on the streets and continue to do it.

These cops have every reason to lie about Kimani Gray pulling a gun on them as they have a history of violating people's rights and lying. Mayor Bloomberg and Commissioner Raymond Kelly have no problem giving away $215,000 in tax payer money to cover the asses of 2 abusive and racist cops that have now taken the life of a 16 year old boy and planted a gun on him to avoid going to prison.

The law department actually calls $215,000 a small sum of money ? ... and why would the city settle a law suit if there was no evidence against the cops. Mayor Bloomberg and Raymond Kelly are to blame for allowing these psychopath cops with criminals histories back out on the streets which has now cost a teenage boy his life.

When citizens break the law they are deemed criminals and sent to jail, but when cops break the law the city throws tax payer money at the victims and allows the corrupt cops to continue to abuse people ?! This ends now, we will not watch one more unarmed citizen be murdered and framed by the criminal organization known as the NYPD.


Detective Phil Atkins had a history of abusing citizens before shooting unarmed Shantel Davis dead in Brooklyn.




The NYPD detective who killed an alleged career criminal as she fled police in Brooklyn yesterday is the target of several lawsuits that claim he is a brutal, door-busting cop who attacks suspects before finding evidence of their guilt.

Detective Phil Atkins, 44, a 12-year NYPD vet, was the target of seven lawsuits fingering him as a violent enforcer who skirts the law.

The city settled five of the suits — to the tune of more than $224,000 — and the last two are still pending.

Atkins's alleged victims say he has a habit of drawing his gun and arresting would-be suspects violently only to find out later that he’s got no case against them.

One, schoolteacher Gillian Brown, said Atkins and his team of cops from the 67th Precinct’s Brooklyn South Narcotics Division busted into her Brooklyn home in 2008 with their guns drawn at about 5:30 a.m., while she was showering. One of the cops — it's not clear who — called her a “bitch” and demanded she reveal where she kept her crack cocaine.

Brown was arrested violently, she claimed, “roughly marched down the stairs” and held with extra-tight handcuffs, according to court papers.

Her son was charged with fifth-degree possession of marijuana. The crack cocaine detectives sought was never found and a criminal case against Brown was never filed. The city settled with her for $140,000.

NYPD spokesman Paul Browne brushed off the lawsuits on a call with reporters today.

“This is a litigious town and active officers have lawsuits and complaints,” Browne said.

Michael Palladino, president of the Detectives’ Endowment Association, also defended Atkins.

“It it is unfair to measure a narcotics detective’s performance by lawsuits that are filed,” Palladino told The Post.

He said some of the lawsuits are filed by thugs in Atkins’ precinct hoping to make a quick buck. “Drug dealers are interested in making money either by selling drugs or filing lawsuits,” Palladino added.

Of the seven lawsuits, stops and arrests Atkins conducted either led to no prosecution or charges were dismissed later on.

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