Pages

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Judge Assaults Disabled Black Man While Shouting "Run Ni%ger Run"

2 Men Accuse Police Officer Of Groping Their Genitals During A Search




(WJLA) - Glenn Davis and Rashod Bryant say that on Tuesday night, they were talking outside Bryant’s apartment in Laurel when a Prince George’s County police officer pulled up in his cruiser.

"It happened so fast and it was crazy how it all went down," said Davis.

The officer reportedly got out of the vehicle and began accusing them of wrongdoing -- calling them dealers and accusing them of selling drugs.

But Bryant says he works as a juvenile counselor, and Davis is an electrician.

"We asked him what we did...He would not give us an explanation on what we did," explained Bryant.

They say the officer ordered them to hand over their ID’s, and while conducting a pat down search, touched the men inappropriately.

"He took his hands, went down into my boxers, and grabbed by private area," claimed Bryant.

"I'm standing here the whole time and that's when he groped me. And I'm like, what am I supposed to do right now?" said Davis.

"I feel sexually violated. It made me feel less than a man out here," added Bryant.

The men say several minutes later, a neighbor picked up her cell phone and got video of a second pat down. Bryant, on the far side, says the officer again touched him inappropriately – but this time from the outside of his shorts.

The two men say that after the incident the officer didn’t charge the men with any crimes – but told them they were loitering.

Police have since confirmed that soon after learning about these complaints, they reached out to the men, and that investigators with Internal Affairs are looking into the allegations leveled against the officer.

Only moments after we left the apartment complex to put our story together, Bryant called us. He said the officer was back, and once again questioning them and yet another resident about loitering.

100 Seattle Cops File Lawsuit Saying They Have CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT To Brutalize Citizens

Race Matters: NYC Still Making Racially-Targeted Herb Arrests Despite Promised Policy Changes


NYPD Continues Low-Level Marijuana Arrests

Mayor DeBlasio promised that forces would no longer focus on low-level mary jane violations and prevent cops from pulling “stop & frisk” searches that clearly target minorities. But an NY congressman is pointing out that it’s all business as usual in NYC, and it’s sending more Blacks and Latinos to jail than anyone else. 

Via HuffPost:

At a press conference outside One Police Plaza in Manhattan on Tuesday, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) pointed to recent data showing that thousands of New Yorkers are getting arrested for possessing pot, most of them minorities.

“The new administration promised change, but instead we got more of the same,” Jeffries said, referring to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s campaign pledge to lower arrests for possessing small amounts of marijuana.

Data released earlier this month from the New York state Division of Criminal Justice Services shows that from January to March, more than 7,000 individuals were arrested in New York City for possessing small amounts of marijuana, and 86 percent of them were black or Latino. That number of arrests, Jeffries said, puts New York City on track to have just as many low-level marijuana arrests in 2014 as it did in 2013, when nearly 29,000 New Yorkers were busted for low-level marijuana possession.

The number of arrests in the first three months of 2014 are higher than they were in either of the last two three-month periods of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s administration in 2013.

The vast majority of marijuana arrests in New York City are for the lowest misdemeanor charge — criminal possession in the fifth degree — in which the arrestee either possessed less than two ounces of marijuana, or had the drug “in public view.”

Since 1977, possession of less than 25 grams of marijuana — a little less than an ounce — has been decriminalized in New York state. Under the law, those caught with such a small amount of weed are subject to a $100 violation for a first offense.

However, since the late-1990s, NYPD officers have been asking the hundreds of thousands of people they stop on the streets each year empty their pockets. In 2013, 85 percent of those people were black or Latino.

When pot comes out of the pocket, it becomes “in public view,” thus allowing police to make an arrest for misdemeanor criminal possession in the fifth degree. Arrestees can face up to three months in jail, and a criminal record.

SMH! Yes marijuana is illegal…but this system seems to be in place specifically to place (and keep) Black and Brown people in the justice system over trivial nonsense. What are your thoughts?