Moderator: Community Team
Only two sergeants and one officer showed up in one of Atlanta’s six police zones, according to police officers who don’t want to be named — the morning after an unusual number of police officers called out sick.
On Wednesday, multiple sources within the Atlanta Police Department told CNN that officers were not responding to calls in three of the department’s six zones.
Though the department denied that was the case, a police union director backed CNN’s sources’ accounts and said that, in some instances, officers were refusing to leave their precincts unless a fellow police officer required backup.
The staffing at Zone 6 was so sparse that when the department heard that several protesters were planning to take over the precinct, the remaining staff removed critical equipment from the building and relocated to another zone, according to Atlanta police officers who didn’t want to be named.
https://tampa.cbslocal.com/2020/06/19/r ... g-calls-4/
riskllama wrote:so basically, Atlanta cops are saying that if killing black citizens is now officially a "no no", then they're not interested in showing up for work? not very professional, imo...
"On Monday, fifteen FBI special agents conducted numerous interviews regarding the situation at Talladega Superspeedway," the joint statement from U.S. Attorney Jay E. Town and FBI Special Agent in Charge Johnnie Sharp, Jr. "After a thorough review of the facts and evidence surrounding this event, we have concluded that no federal crime was committed."
Following law enforcement's announcement, NASCAR put out its own statement Tuesday saying:
"The FBI has completed its investigation at Talladega Superspeedway and determined that Bubba Wallace was not the target of a hate crime. The FBI report concludes, and photographic evidence confirms, that the garage door pull rope fashioned like a noose had been positioned there since as early as last fall."
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/n ... 245722001/
mrswdk wrote:This time, a racist framing:
Cop plants crack, cop gets caught, cop gets mad. And the woman who filmed this was Breonna Taylor
mrswdk wrote:Apparently jim needs lots of context to decide whether or not an officer filmed planting drugs on a civilian did anything wrong.
mrswdk wrote:Apparently jim needs lots of context to decide whether or not an officer filmed planting drugs on a civilian did anything wrong.
jimboston wrote:
What percentage of drug busts involve planting evidence?
I have no idea but I suspect it’s low... I would be willing to bet many more people get away with having drugs on them and discarding them before the police find them.
mookiemcgee wrote:jimboston wrote:
What percentage of drug busts involve planting evidence?
I have no idea but I suspect it’s low... I would be willing to bet many more people get away with having drugs on them and discarding them before the police find them.
This has always been such a bullshit question. The ONLY thing stats would tell you is how often cops were CAUGHT planting evidence, which is obviously super low.
Are you equating someone carrying drugs on them to cops planting evidence on innocent citizens? Oh wait, they aren't innocent because they had drugs on them
mrswdk wrote:jim do you think the guy who knelt on George Floyd's neck and choked him out needs prosecuting or do you need more info than just the video of the killing before you feel able to come to a decision?
jimboston wrote:mrswdk wrote:jim do you think the guy who knelt on George Floyd's neck and choked him out needs prosecuting or do you need more info than just the video of the killing before you feel able to come to a decision?
Sometimes the video shows everything you need.
Return to Practical Explanation about Next Life,
Users browsing this forum: pmac666