Another Isolated Incident
Tuesday, July 15th, 2008This one’s second-hand, so take it for what it’s worth.
But it is another data point for my theory that this stuff happens way more frequently than what’s reported in the newspaper.
This one’s second-hand, so take it for what it’s worth.
But it is another data point for my theory that this stuff happens way more frequently than what’s reported in the newspaper.
*UPDATE: A fellow blogger has scolded me for stating that this aid went directly to the Taliban. It was actually humanitarian aid ostensibly given to Afghan farmers. But it was given to the Taliban’s subjects, in direct response to the Taliban’s crackdown on opium, a crackdown cheered on by the Bush administration. The Taliban certainly benefited from the aid. And much of the aid ended up getting confiscated by the Taliban, anyway. Oh, and in the end the crackdown actually only strengthened the Taliban. They merely eradicated the opium farms not under their direct control, driving up the cost of the stuff. Meanwhile, they themselves kept selling on the open market, with higher profit margins. My point was that the Bush administration’s moral absolutes when it comes to dealing with terrorist-harboring regimes haven’t been so absolute when it comes to the drug war. That point still stands. If I have time, I’ll have more on all of this later.
Here is what the gangsters in blue do when you mess with their game:
NEW YORK, NEW YORK — A Queens bar owner claims the NYPD is trying to run him out of business because he helped prove his patrons were framed in a fake drug-dealing sting.
Eduardo Espinoza, 36, of Elmhurst, was hit with more than a dozen violations from the 110th Precinct — including two for failing to have liquid soap and paper towels in his bar bathroom — after handing over a videotape suggesting undercover officers made up a buy-and-bust deal in his club in January.
I been harassed so much, I’m selling my business,said Espinoza, owner of Delicias de Mi Tierra on 91st Place in Elmhurst.
Every two to three weeks, there’s cops in here, searching the bar. If there’s no violation, they’ll make it up. I lost all my clients — everybody’s scared to come in my place right now.Espinoza was working in his bar about 1:40 a.m. on Jan. 5 when undercover officers busted brothers Jose and Maximo Colon and friends Raul Duchimasa and Luis Rodriguez for allegedly peddling $100 worth of cocaine.
Queens prosecutors dropped those charges last week because of Espinoza’s security video showing that the undercover officers had no contact with them in the bar, Colon’s lawyer said.
Prosecutors and the NYPD’s Internal Affairs Bureau are investigating whether to bring charges against the officers. Investigators are also poring over the officers’ prior cases for signs of misconduct, sources said.
An NYPD spokesman said the department would look into the matter. But sources blamed the frequent police visits on community complaints.
Espinoza said he thinks police are retaliating against him because of a strange phone call he received shortly before the harassment began.
A man who identified himself as the officer who made the drug arrest in his club demanded to know if Espinoza had taped the events of that night.
I said I already gave it to the defendants,Espinoza said,He said,Oh s—t.He hung up.Espinoza, who has owned the bar for 2-1/2 years, said he’d gotten only two summonses before this year.
Most of his summonses have been tossed — including one for having an 8-foot neon sign without a permit, he said.
He’s still fighting a $2,500 fine from the Buildings Department for being overcapacity and a summons for ignoring police orders when he tried to park outside the 110th Precinct stationhouse last month.
I knew they were innocent from the first moment,Espinoza said of the framed men.I felt so bad, I put myself in their shoes. Now [the cops] keep harassing me.—Nicole Bode, New York Daily News (2008-07-01): Bar owner: Cops harassing me after fake bust
(Via Bad Cop News 2008-07-04, via Drug War Chronicle 2008-07-11.)
(Via Radley Balko 2008-06-23.)
These are scenes from a SWAT team training exercise in Floyd County, Georgia, in which a squad of heavily armed paramilitaries practice storming, sweeping, and occupying a house, while dressed in military-style fatigues and heavily armed with assault rifles, body armor, gas grenades, etc. The training exercise is part of a recruitment video that the Floyd County Public Safety department is preparing, in order to show potential [job] applicants what Floyd County Public Safety is all about,
apparently because Floyd County cops want to hire on even more of the kind of people who would be attracted to the prospect of doing things like this all day, and who believe that this sort of thing is what policing is all about:
Do you feel safer now?
In 2006, a sheriff’s deputy in Victorville, California stopped, and then arrested a fellow deputy for DWI.
One of the two deputies was later promoted. The other was fired. Can you guess which was which?
The comments to the article are pretty interesting, too.
“The Ballad of Kathryn Johnston,” by Shawn Mullins.
Get the album <a href="here.
As it turns out, they were just plain ol’ chocolate chip cookies.
The initial story about the guy’s arrest was circulated all over the world.
Police officers in Blue Mound didn’t think much of the cookies dropped off at their station Monday night – until they got a whiff of them.
Overpowering the chocolate chips was the pungent smell of marijuana.
“It reeked of it,” said Lt. Thomas Cain, a Blue Mound police spokesman. “It wasn’t hard to tell. Anyone that’s been around marijuana before would have known.”
Makes you wonder what to think the next time this guy writes in a police report that his probable cause to conduct a search was the scent of marijuana coming from a car or apartment, doesn’t it?
Also, why is it that these field tests police use turn up so many false positives? If you’ll remember back a bit, Dallas police had similar problems when the informant they were using was planting ground up pool chalk on targets. Cops doing field tests in those cases claim the tests showed the chalk (also known as sheet rock) to be cocaine. Several times.
Last year in California, a bottle of Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soap came back positive for GHB.
Last Thursday, narcotics cops in Troy, New York shot the locks off a door, tossed a flash grenade through a window, and stormed a house as part of an early-morning drug raid. They found only a single mother inside, not the drugs or weapons described in the warrant. The raid seems to have stemmed from a bad tip from a confidential informant. But Troy authorities don’t seem particularly repentant. Here’s District Attorney Richard McNally:
"The checks and balances were in place. We checked and double-checked the information in this case. All the checks and double-checks were done. Unfortunately, it didn’t work as planned."
Obviously the checks and balances weren’t in place, or the police wouldn’t have terrorized an innocent woman (fortunately, her five-year-old daughter wasn’t home at the time).
One local TV reporter spoke with a police sergeant related to the case, who said the police have no intention of repairing the damage they did to the woman’s home.
Sgt. Dean: "We did not hit the wrong house, we hit the house that the search warrant directed us to hit."
Anya: "But was that information that led up to that right?"
Sgt. Dean: "My bosses are going through this whole investigative process to make sure that we were as thorough as possible."
Anya: "What was the level of threat that you assessed prior to coming into the home?"
Sgt. Dean: "That there were weapons in the house, or that the drugs were stored in that manor."
Anya: "In this house, you found no drugs?" Sgt. Dean: "We are not publicly speaking on that issue at this point."
Anya: "Do you think this will hurt your credibility?"
Sgt. Dean: "The last thing we want to do is enter an innocent person’s home - it doesn’t get us anywhere, and it doesn’t hamper the drug trade."
Anya: "Will you be going back to clean-up the damage to the house?"
Sgt. Dean: "We just have to enter lawfully with our search warrant, that is our only obligation."
Anya: "And you can leave it in any state that you left it?"
Sgt. Dean: "Yes. We had probable cause that led us to believe there was drug activity."
Which apparently means they feel no obligation to clean up the mess they made.