NYC Resistance holding the NYPD accountable with his camera

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

I did try and contact NYC Resistance for an interview, but emails were not immediately returned. You can visit his YouTube channel to see other videos of him documenting the NYPD conducting warrantless searches in his neighborhood. Keep up the good work NYC Resistance.

According to his YouTube comment:

NYPD’s Black Water mercenary style undercover division which drives around in unmarked cars with bent up license plates or no plates at all continues to plague New yorkers by targeting innocent pedestrians and motorist that have broken no laws. Their so-called proactive policing is in reality the total disregard of the 4th amendment which protects Americans against warrant-less search and seizure.

Officers conducting these stops rarely display their badges so they can not be later identified by the person or persons they have stopped which is a blatant violation of the law and a willful act to avoid accountability. In my opinion this boils down to pure terrorism on the part of the NYPD. They hunt people like animals and subject them to curbside strip searches in hopes of adding new inmates to the booming prison population at the tax payers expense.

They don’t have any money to build modern schools or pay teachers or doctors but they can always find money to build more prisons and buy hi-tech gadgets to more efficiently herd the population in prisons. New York has become a Cybertron like city of cameras, face scanners, license plates readers and real time tracking as the real problem of unemployment is ignored. There are no jobs and there is no help for millions of suffering families and the NYPD is betting on people resorting to crime in a desperate attempt to pay their bills and feed their families as they simultaneously inundate the people with tickets and summons to accelerate the acts of desperation as people try to keep up with the new demands.

This is all being done by design so the few wealthy Elite can both profit and control the increasingly growing improvised masses. I will continue to record and document what I see and speak the truth without fear from the wicked that maintain their power through there choke hold on information and knowledge. Hypocrisy and deception seem to be working all to well for the NYPD and the government, but I am here to show the world the price people pay when you put your safety and security into the hands of others.
You loose both and your freedom along with it.

dealerbanner anim 02 NYC Resistance holding the NYPD accountable with his camera

NYC Resistance holding the NYPD accountable with his camera is a post from Cop Block - "Something must be done about vengeance, a badge, and a gun"

NYC Resistance holding the NYPD accountable with his camera

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

I did try and contact NYC Resistance for an interview, but emails were not immediately returned. You can visit his YouTube channel to see other videos of him documenting the NYPD conducting warrantless searches in his neighborhood. Keep up the good work NYC Resistance.

According to his YouTube comment:

NYPD’s Black Water mercenary style undercover division which drives around in unmarked cars with bent up license plates or no plates at all continues to plague New yorkers by targeting innocent pedestrians and motorist that have broken no laws. Their so-called proactive policing is in reality the total disregard of the 4th amendment which protects Americans against warrant-less search and seizure.

Officers conducting these stops rarely display their badges so they can not be later identified by the person or persons they have stopped which is a blatant violation of the law and a willful act to avoid accountability. In my opinion this boils down to pure terrorism on the part of the NYPD. They hunt people like animals and subject them to curbside strip searches in hopes of adding new inmates to the booming prison population at the tax payers expense.

They don’t have any money to build modern schools or pay teachers or doctors but they can always find money to build more prisons and buy hi-tech gadgets to more efficiently herd the population in prisons. New York has become a Cybertron like city of cameras, face scanners, license plates readers and real time tracking as the real problem of unemployment is ignored. There are no jobs and there is no help for millions of suffering families and the NYPD is betting on people resorting to crime in a desperate attempt to pay their bills and feed their families as they simultaneously inundate the people with tickets and summons to accelerate the acts of desperation as people try to keep up with the new demands.

This is all being done by design so the few wealthy Elite can both profit and control the increasingly growing improvised masses. I will continue to record and document what I see and speak the truth without fear from the wicked that maintain their power through there choke hold on information and knowledge. Hypocrisy and deception seem to be working all to well for the NYPD and the government, but I am here to show the world the price people pay when you put your safety and security into the hands of others.
You loose both and your freedom along with it.

dealerbanner anim 02 NYC Resistance holding the NYPD accountable with his camera

NYC Resistance holding the NYPD accountable with his camera is a post from Cop Block - "Something must be done about vengeance, a badge, and a gun"

New York police harass cigarette vendors instead of fighting crime

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

A recent articles in The New York Times profiles “Lonnie Loosie,” given name Lonnie Warner, one of numerous NYC residents who makes his living on the black market by selling cigarettes to pedestrians. Warner sells both packs and loosies (single cigarettes) which is where he got his nickname.

According to the Times, Warner’s way of making money has earned him the attention of the NYPD. He has been arrested numerous times and charged with selling untaxed cigarettes.

yjploosies articleLarge New York police harass cigarette vendors instead of fighting crime

Lonnie Loosie selling a cigarette (Source: New York Times)

Mr. Warner said he and each of his two partners took home $120 to $150 a day, profit made from selling about 2,000 cigarettes, mostly two at a time. Each transaction is a misdemeanor offense.

Among all of Midtown’s cigarette vendors, Mr. Warner stands out, partly because he seems to get arrested more frequently than others. That may be because his style of salesmanship is hardly furtive.

“The cops call me a fish — that’s my nickname, cause I’m easy to catch,” Mr. Warner said during a series of recent interviews. “When they need a body to arrest, they come pick me up.”

In the four years since he began selling cigarettes, Mr. Warner recalls being arrested 15 times, generally on the charge of selling untaxed tobacco. He has been arrested so often that he can recognize 10 different plainclothes police officers, he claims. The ever-present risk of arrest makes working with partners valuable — “we have six eyes on this block,” he explained.

Mr. Warner grew up in Jersey City and spent about two decades in New Jersey prisons for a series of armed robberies. Those crimes date from a time when he says he was addicted to crack cocaine.

After his release from a 13-year sentence in 2006, Mr. Warner tried to find steady work in New York, but was invariably rebuffed — because of his felony status, he suspects. When he considers his options for making a living, he sees few besides selling loosies.

“I’m sorry that it’s come to this, but this is what it’s come to,” he said.

He said he would like to work someday as a barker for tour buses, selling Manhattan’s attractions to wandering tourists.

“I love the streets,” he said. “I love the people in the streets.”

– Joseph Goldstein, “On Manhattan Streets, Loosie Men Sell Illegal Smokes” (Apr. 4th, 2011), The New York Times

Warner and the other cigarette vendors of NYC aren’t alone. It’s very common for police (especially those in cities) to harass people for for running unlicensed vending businesses. When Ademo and Pete were in Las Vegas working on Liberty on Tour, they met several water vendors who said they had been harassed before.

And while police are busy harassing people for simply trying to make a living, millions of violent crimes and property crimes go unsolved every year. It really shows where their priorities are.

New York police harass cigarette vendors instead of fighting crime is a post from Cop Block - "Something must be done about vengeance, a badge, and a gun"

Cops Say the Darnedest Things

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Over the past few years myself and Pete Eyre have done projects, such as the Motorhome Diaries and Liberty On Tour, and activism all across the country. Sadly, when attempting to educate your fellow man or while standing up for individual rights we often encounter some sort of police presence. Above is a video with several clips of some of the statements police have made to us in the past while the camera was rolling.

Though this may be a 4 min video of the best clips we’ve got on camera, I’ve personally engaged in conversations with hundreds of officers who feel the same way as these guys. It’s just a job, they need to feed their families and ‘if the law is the law, then the law is the law’ – whatever that means? Kinda scary that you allow these people to protect you, isn’t it?

bloglink Cops Say the Darnedest Things Join the forum discussion on this post

Cops Say the Darnedest Things is a post from Cop Block - "Something must be done about vengeance, a badge, and a gun"

NYPD Ticket Man For Jaywalking but Jaywalk Themselves?

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

I’ve been digging through the 8 TB of footage Pete and I have assembled and came across this incident, shot last August, while doing Uncle Sam Outreach in Times Square. Watch the video below to see what happens next.

Even though this man was being detained for Jaywalking, something that shouldn’t even be a ‘crime’, the police still didn’t want us to film them – Why? They asked Marv over and over to tell us not to film but he wouldn’t. I’m glad we were able to stop and film, especially since most of Marv’s friends had bailed on him, and that the police didn’t escalate the situation. Our presence also helped speed up the process probably because the police didn’t want to end up on YouTube. Fail.

If you have a video you’d like to share with CopBlock.org contact us.

NYPD Ticket Man For Jaywalking but Jaywalk Themselves? is a post from Cop Block - "Something must be done about vengeance, a badge, and a gun"

NYPD Ticket Man For Jaywalking but Jaywalk Themselves?

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

I’ve been digging through the 8 TB of footage Pete and I have assembled and came across this incident, shot last August, while doing Uncle Sam Outreach in Times Square. Watch the video below to see what happens next.

Even though this man was being detained for Jaywalking, something that shouldn’t even be a ‘crime’, the police still didn’t want us to film them – Why? They asked Marv over and over to tell us not to film but he wouldn’t. I’m glad we were able to stop and film, especially since most of Marv’s friends had bailed on him, and that the police didn’t

NYPD Ticket Man For Jaywalking but Jaywalk Themselves? is a post from Cop Block - "Something must be done about vengeance, a badge, and a gun"

The Anti Rave Act of 2011

Monday, March 14th, 2011

Making it illegal to have a party on your property with pre-recorded music

Edited by Dylboz and Jenn

Why would someone want to make it illegal to hold a private party that features pre-recorded music and lasts over 3.5 hours? I can’t think of any other reason than the desire to give police even more laws they can arrest non-violent people for, and to exert total control over what people can do with their free time. This is a story that has died down a little over the past month or so but it still demands concern, at least in my opinion.

If you were to have one of these dangerous unauthorized gatherings under Fiona Ma’s proposed bill AB-74, you would be subject to arrest and a $10,000 fine, or twice the amount of total money generated by the party. Her justification for this is that 2 people died from using “drugs” while at a similar event To punish everyone because of two people who made a terrible mistake seems irresponsible, irrational and unjust. Such an approach is not only unreasonable, but thoroughly immoral. It is simply not possible to legislate away all the dangers in society. Making something illegal does not make it disappear either; it only drives it underground (thus causing even more danger and increasing the likelihood of illegal drug trafficking). Furthermore, extending her logic to the rest of human activity, Ms. Ma should also rigorously pursue legislation banning driving, skydiving, swimming and other leisure activities that could potentially result in death.

There may or may not be private individuals willingly putting a substances into their bodies to enhance the night’s experience and let loose a little bit at these “horror drug fueled events,” but it is ethically no different than people drinking alcohol, which is completely legal.

However, her law is so broad that any person throwing a party on their own private property (keep in mind this is property they allegedly own) that plays an iPod with 3.5 hours of music stored on it, held at night, would also be subject to arrest and/or fine. Of course, she did make it clear that her own New Year’s Eve party would not be subject to these laws, even though people were paying up to $500 to attend and playing pre-recorded music, because as long as there is “a business license to operate a bar, club, theater, entertainment venue, or other similar business, or to conduct sporting events…” it is not subject to the legislation. Essentially, the rich and the well-connected can have whatever parties they can pay for, while everyone else is subject to disproportionately harsh fines for their gatherings and parties because of the stupidity of 2 people.

Assemblywoman Fiona Ma, let me just say this, please stop telling people what they can and cannot do. With real crimes with victims like murder, rape, robbery still quite common, surely there are better things for an assemblywoman to address besides loud parties. Trying to ban “raves” as a political move, under the guise of saving lives, is just pathetic and disingenuous. You’re actually destroying lives by encouraging cops to arrest more people to be imprisoned and fined. Is that your goal on a subject that you actually know little about? Shame on you!

Since Fiona Ma’s bill talks big about saving lives from drugs commonly taken in clubs, let’s look a little more closely at her issue. While I thought raves pretty much went extinct in the 90′s, I guess it’s still going pretty strong, usually under different names like “music conferences” and so forth. These club drugs she talks about can be broken down to the 4 most popular: Weed, Cocaine, Ecstasy and Ketamine. Cocaine probably is not best characterized as a drug closely associated with raves, since it is a drug that is used frequently in recreational contexts other than dance parties. I have to also exclude weed as being particularly associated with raves, as it is used medically and more often than any other illegal intoxicant, in a variety of settings unrelated to raves.

That leaves the 2 drugs most commonly associated with raves. There may be more, but for now I want to focus on these two. Ecstasy is the name most commonly used by the media. According to the media, Ecstasy is a little pill that you swallow. So with their wide definition, I can walk downstairs grab some sand, dog poop, concrete, and mix it with some super-glue and caffeine, green food coloring and I’d have what they call a roll. Would that be dangerous? Absolutely, but you really don’t need to be a rocket scientist to see what people put in these pills, because a lab analyzes them and publishes the results for everyone to see. The real danger with Ecstasy lies in the fact that it is illegal, and is produced, sold and distributed underground. Because it is illegal, there is no transparency, and there is no control over what is in it. What they should focus on is MDMA. I know there are other forms or variants like MDA and MDEA but we will stick to MDMA or “3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine”.

Now MDMA is a DEA Schedule I, which includes drugs deemed to have no medical uses. In fact, MDMA actually seems to have some great medical uses.

“MDMA had a beneficial therapeutic use prior to scheduling. Hundreds of therapists and psychiatrists used MDM Assisted psychotherapy with thousands of patients suffering from terminal illness, trauma, marital difficulties, drug addiction, phobias, and other disorders. MDMA was also used outside of therapeutic circles. With many anecdotal claims of benefits, users showed little evidence of problematic physiological or psychological reactions or addiction.(1)”

If you you’re close to my age you might remember those old commercials saying “this is your brain … and this is your brain on drugs,” followed by an egg being cracked into a sizzling frying pan, implying that all drugs, including Ecstasy, will fry your brain. Well according to the latest study (4), MDMA does not cause any type of brain damage. Thus, it appears more lies are being told to us by our government, although it’s not too surprising. If this drug does not cause brain damage, and its only negative side-effect if taken in the right dosage is dehydration and an increase in body temperature(3), it is unclear why it is illegal. True, those two side effects sound pretty dangerous, just like if I laid out in the sun on a Florida beach during the summer, I would probably become dehydrated and suffer heat exhaustion. But no one would think it reasonable to ban the sun, or ban sunbathing.

While I am in no way trying to promote the use of any drug here in the U.S. or overseas, I am looking for an explanation as to why people are being thrown in cages for many years, despite to the complete and utter failure of the war on drugs. Neither of these substances carry any type of risk for physical addiction like alcohol, tobacco or caffeine (caffeine being the most commonly used mood-altering drug in the world). These three legal drugs all have seriously averse side-effects as you may know if you ever tried to stop smoking, quit drinking or try and get through you day without having your moning cup of coffee.

Additionally, the chemical known as Ketamine, Ketaset, Anesket, or Ketalar is another drug associated with such clubs/parties, and goes by many different names but is most widely referred to as “special K”. It is used as an anesthetic, particularly as a general anesthetic for children or persons of poor health, and also in veterinary medicine. So why is this a Schedule III narcotic? Studies show that it has major medical benefits in curing depression.

“It’s like a magic drug,” said the lead researcher of a team from Yale University in the US whose latest study suggests that ketamine, a drug normally used as an anasthetic, could be reformulated as an anti-depressant that takes effect in hours rather than the usual weeks and months of most available medications.(2)”

Unlike Ecstasy, you can easily find Ketamine (RS)-2-(2-Chlorophenyl)-2- (methylamino)-cyclohexan- 1-one) in its purest form, packaged in an FDA-approved bottle with a tamper proof cap that shows it came straight from a legitimate and regulated company, with “lot” numbers, and an expiration date. This is obviously much safer than buying drugs like unpackaged pills or powder.

These club drugs in their purest form have relatively minor negative side-effects on one’s body. Furthermore, people seeking to use them at parties are mostly occasional users. As such, it seems unreasonable to make them completely illegal. Criminalization necessarily drives the market for these substances underground, and means any of them can be cut, mixed, or otherwise tampered with without any legal recourse available to the buyer, which makes using the drug far more dangerous.

Why do we continue to lock people in jail for the sake of feel-good laws? And that really is all they are. Banning things and making various substances illegal never eradicates them. It only drives them underground, makes them more dangerous, and removes transparency and accountability, while encouraging fraud and violence. Effectively, any ban is really only a moral decree that protects no one and helps nothing. It is an expensive moral decree at that – it costs people’s lives.If you look at the number of persons incarcerated for non-violent drug offenses this year alone (and its only March), it is already at around 326,000. In 2009 there were 1,663,582 such arrests. One of those arrested was actually a real criminal, a Federal police officer smuggling 700,000 ecstasy pills, making it the largest ecstasy bust in 2010.

You also have a lot of people that complain their taxes are too high. Consider a recent comment from none other than Fiona Ma “Right now, people are attending events on state-owned property and are dying and overdosing. It’s also costing taxpayers from all the public resources that go into deaths and drug overdoses on state property.” Well 15 billion dollars went to fighting the war on drugs last year, again costing taxpayers more money and making those drugs and the business of buying, selling and using them far more dangerous. Personally, I think that money can be better spent on preventative education and treatment for people with addictions who need help.

But should all drugs be legal and sold over the counter without a prescription? You have a lot of parents saying, “well if drugs are legal, my kids will do them.” This may seem like a good argument, but last time I checked, alcohol and cigarettes were legal, but there are still various barriers preventing minors from acquiring alcohol and cigarettes. Yet, they are both legal drugs that can be bought by adults at almost every corner gas station. Further, kids who are dying to do drugs will do so, but instead of turning to legal, safer drugs, they will turn to things like sniffing paint or other far more deadly means of getting high. Perhaps counter-intuitively, the legalization of such substances, combined with proper education would likely do far more good than the harmful, “zero tolerance, all drugs are evil and deadly and addictive, all the time” approach currently being pursued in schools and homes across the country. If you tell a kid that something is bad or dangerous, and they find out that it is not, that makes you a liar. Education and truth are the best policies in this regard.

It’s true that there are already a lot of medical drugs freely available for purchase at the drug store, no prescription required. They’re called “over the counter, ” or OTC medicines, but despite the damage drugs like ibuprofen and acetaminophen can do to your liver or kidneys, they’re still nowhere near as effective at treating pain as the Schedule II and III drugs that are illegal to possess without a prescription. Now, if someone hurts themselves, lets say they cracked or bruised a rib, and there is nothing that can be done to fix it other than rest and taking it easy, under current laws, they need to have medical insurance or a lot of money to visit a doctor to examine them, just to tell them what they likely already know, and possibly write them a prescription for an effective treatment, like Vicodin or Percocet. While in the absence of these needless regulations, they could just drive to the pharmacy, pick up some pain medicine and be on their way.

People genuinely wonder why medical care is so expensive in the United States. In some other countries (god forbid!) they trust their citizens to go to a pharmacy, describe their symptoms to a pharmacist, and get basic medications relatively quickly and cheaply, without having to pay for a doctor’s visit, obtain a prescription, possibly undergo x-rays, and other bureaucratic nonsense before getting such simple things such as pain medications or antibiotics. So yes, there are addicts and abusers out there, and our government has used them to justify passing laws to make acquiring the proper medication on demand illegal.

Unfortunately, because of these silly laws, a friend I know had to go meet SWIM (Someone who isn’t me) to obtain what he considered would be the right dose to manage his pain for a couple days. Sounds insane doesn’t it, that he had to buy pain medicine on the street to heal his pain, because the system works against him. Again, driving prescription drugs underground to a black market only encourages criminals and feeds criminal activities, which perpetuate violence against the rest of us, and expose everyone to needless risk and expense.

Another popular argument (usually offered by police officers), is that drug users have victims. When I ask them to explain, I usually get the same responses that they go out and steal, rob and burglarize. Well that’s generally correct – those three crimes have victims. However, the act of placing something into your body does not. This would be analogous to banning driving because while driving, someone could hurt, kill or destroy the property of another. Ultimately, people can only rightly be held accountable for what they actually do, the harm they cause others, the property they damage, not their state of mind, their body chemistry, or the potential for harming others the police imagine comes from taking a drug. So please try and explain again on how the act of taking something in the privacy of your own home when done responsibly, and not being in the presence of a child, has a victim. “Well … you’re right.”

Assemblywoman Fiona Ma did end up pulling her bill after much criticism. If you do decide to go out and party make sure you do your research first on the true dangers of what you may be placing into your body.

Police wrongly visit house 80 times

Sunday, March 6th, 2011

When police raid innocent homeowners, the police often claim that such raids are “isolated incidents.” Sure, it’s horrible when men-in-black kick down an innocent person’s door in the middle of the night, toss deadly flashbang grenades inside, scream at the occupants, throw them to the ground at gunpoint, and ransack their home, but we shouldn’t get to worked up about this sort of thing because it’s just so damn rare, right?

Reading the story of Walter and Rose Martin should give you doubts. The Martins, an elderly, law-abiding couple living in Brooklyn, were visited by the New York City Police Department at least 50 times over the course of 8 years. The Martins were never the victims of a full-blown no-knock raid, but their story shows how much effort police put into ensuring the integrity of their search warrants.

Apparently, the address of Walter and Rose Martin’s Brooklyn home was used to test a department-wide computer system in 2002.

What followed was years of cops appearing at the Martins’ door looking for murderers, robbers and rapists – as often as three times a week.

After the Daily News exclusively reported on the couple’s plague of police raids [on March 18th, 2010], apologetic detectives from the NYPD’s Identity Theft Squad showed up at their home.

Rose Martin, 82, said they told her Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly ordered them to solve the puzzle – stat.

By the end of the day, NYPD Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne said the snafu was traced to a 2002 computer test, though he couldn’t explain why the couple’s address was used as a test case in the first place.

He said that when the Martins complained to cops in 2007 about their scary series of official doorknocks, police tried to wipe their address from the system.

But the raids continued. The most recent, on Tuesday, left 83-year-old World War II vet Walter Martin woozy from soaring blood pressure.

Investigators found [on March 18th, 2010] that not every computer file bearing the Martin’s address was deleted.

“It wasn’t supposed to stay in [the system],” Browne said. “It’s been removed.”

In order to be “doubly cautious” in the future, Browne said cops have flagged the Martin’s address so no officer will be dispatched to the home without double-checking the address.

A skeptical Rose Martin asked the department to write her an official letter, dubious that such a long-standing problem could be fixed in a day.

“It seems like too simple a correction for something that has been going on for eight years,” she said.

– Kate Nocera and John Lauinger, “Computer snafu is behind at least 50 ‘raids’ on Brooklyn couple’s home” (March 19th, 2010), Daily News

The story gets weirder. Apparently the police visits to the Martins’ residence started before the Martins even moved into the house. In fact, the reason the previous owner sold the house to the Martins in 1997 is that he was wrongly visited about 30 times between 1994 and 1997 despite filing numerous complaints and was so freaked out that he decided to leave town.

Of course, none of the police who participated in this lengthy campaign of harassment will ever spend a second behind bars or have to pay even a cent of damages to the people they terrorized. Perhaps that’s why they felt comfortable ignoring all the complaints filed against them and using their lame “computer glitch” excuse — which doesn’t even begin to make sense — to explain away their own thuggishness and incompetence.

The Blue Wall of Silence

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011

Dallas Police Officer, Quaitemes Williams, has been fired and charged with misdemeanor official oppression for kicking and macing a handcuffed suspect. Williams and another officer, Edward Cruz-Done struggled to take Rodarick Dasean Lyles into custody for the “crime” of having a suspended license. During that struggle Lyles fell onto Williams’ arm, causing Williams to become angry. As a result of his anger Williams maced and then kicked Lyles in the head. Officer Ricky Upshaw witnessed Williams’ attack on Lyles as he drove up on the scene. It was Upshaw who reported Williams to supervisors.

Speaking of Upshaw’s whistle-blowing, Dallas Police Chief David Brown said “One of the things that I really want to express about Officer Upshaw’s action is that we should not as a department ostracize him in any way. We should applaud him for coming forward, him intervening.” While I am thrilled that Chief Brown is speaking out in support of Upshaw (publicly at least), I find it very telling that there is even a need for him to do so. The “Blue Wall of Silence” is so ingrained into the institution of policing that the chief of a police department has to make a point to remind officers not to ostracize another officer for reporting the crime of another officer.

The support Upshaw received from his chief is a far cry from the experience of Ellaville Georgia Police Officer, Joseph Sosnovik. He found out the hard way what can happen to police “snitches” when he was fired for reporting a fellow officer that inappropriately touched a woman that was riding in his police cruiser. The acting police chief, Charles Pine, tried to get Sosnovik to keep quiet, telling him that “this stuff need to be over with.” Pines warned Sosnovik that he would be fired in he continued to pursue the matter. “He told me, that if I pursued questions or pursued anything or any other type of incident on this or documentation, that I’d lose my job. He continued to say that I would lose my job if I continued to ask questions.”

Radley Balko’s column “Why Cops Aren’t Whistleblower’s” from the February issue of Reason tells of other stories of police officers enduring the wrath of other officers when they come forward to report misconduct. Kansas City Police Officer, Max Seifert, was forced into early retirement, losing part of his pension and health benefits, when he refused to participate and even fought against the attempted cover-up of the beating of Barron Bowling by DEA agent Timothy McCue. Bowling was awarding $830,000 for the beating he endured. The judge in Bowling’s lawsuit acknowledged the mistreatment that Seifert endured to bring Bowling’s beating to light saying that Seifert was “shunned, subjected to gossip and defamation by his police colleagues, and treated as a pariah. The way Seifert was treated was shameful.”

Balko also tells the story of New York City police whistle-blower Adrian Schoolcraft. It was Schoolcraft who brought attention to the quota and crime statistics data manipulation going on in the NYC Police Department. For his trouble he was raided by a SWAT team and taken to a psychiatric hospital for six days against his will.

As long as the Blue Wall of Silence stands, the “few bad apples” argument is irrelevant. It does not matter how many “bad cops” there are if “good cops” refuse to come forward and report misconduct. If accountability for police officers is to be achieved we will need more officers like Upshaw, Sosenik, Seifert, and Schoolcraft.

The Absurdity of Self-Defense Restrictions

Thursday, February 24th, 2011
Nick Foley, who found CopBlock.org because of Pete’s arrest for wearing a hat in court, contacted us to share his encounter with New York City Police. I’d like to thank Nick for taking the time to share his story with us and for having the courage to stand up to cops like this. If you [...]