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Cebu_4_2
13th July 2012, 12:44 AM
Not sure if this one was the same as was posted the other day. Too late now for me to highlight... feel free

San Antonio Police Beat Pregnant Woman: Part of a National Trend? (http://www.republicmagazine.com/news/san-antonio-police-beat-pregnant-woman-part-of-a-national-trend.html)

Posted on 11 July 2012 by William Grigg
http://www.republicmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Beating-Destiny-Rios-200x153.jpg (http://www.republicmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Beating-Destiny-Rios.jpg)Beating a tiny, handcuffed, pregnant woman is an appropriate use of force, according to San Antonio Police Chief William McManus.
On July 4, a San Antonio police officer spotted Destiny Rios walking on a city street and asked her name. After discovering an active warrant for prostitution, the officer attempted to arrest Rios. Two other officers arrived, handcuffed her, and threw her to the ground, where one of them struck the screaming woman at least nine times (http://www.foxsanantonio.com/newsroom/top_stories/videos/vid_11031.shtml#.T_1_u1gfajk.email).
Rios is 5’1’’ and weighs 126 pounds. She is also pregnant. Eyewitness Lorezno Rios (no relation), who captured the assault on video, recalled: “All I heard was her yelling to get off me. I heard her yell `I’m pregnant. She was already cuffed and they started to beat her.”
Chief McManus insists that there was nothing amiss in the behavior of his officers. Beating a prone, tiny and handcuffed woman is justified, he said, “in order to get her to comply.”
“Size makes no difference,” maintained McManus, who declined to watch the citizen video of the assault. “It’s the amount of fight in the person.” Apparently there’s enough “fight” in a 5’1”, 126-pound pregnant woman to pose a significant threat to three large, armed police officers – at least by McManus’s calculations.
This is at least the third recent high-profile case of police abusing a pregnant woman.
Earlier this year in Georgia’s DeKalb County, Raven Dozier – who was roughly nine months pregnant – was kicked in the stomach by Officer Jarad Wheeler and then arrested for “obstruction.”
At the time, Raven was actually trying to help police officers during a domestic dispute between her brother and his estranged girlfriend. After a brief confrontation, the police tasered Raven’s unarmed brother. Several officers then swarmed him and began to beat him.
“He’s on the ground!” screamed Dozier. “You don’t need to do that!”
“Shut the f**k up!” snarled one of the officers. When Dozier continued to protest, Officer Wheeler strode up to her and kicked her in the stomach (http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/dekalb-officer-investigated-after-allegedly-kickin/nNzDS/) with sufficient force to open a door.
For about fifteen minutes, the DeKalb County officers conferred with a supervisor outside the house — within earshot of Raven’s brother, who was sitting, handcuffed, in the back of a police car.
“He kicked a pregnant woman,” one of the officers reported.
“You’ve got to charge her with something,” another replied.
After that discussion, several officers re-entered the home, where Dozier was on a couch trying to regain her composure.
Affecting concern for Dozier’s welfare, one of officers asked if they could take a picture of the traumatized mother and asked her to put on pair of shoes and step outside the house for a moment to talk with the supervisor.
As soon as Raven had crossed the threshold of her home, she was placed under arrest for “obstruction.”
Displaying uncommon good sense, the intake officer at DeKalb County Jail refused to book Dozier. Instead he sent her to a nearby hospital, where the expectant mother passed a small amount of blood and amniotic fluid. . A photograph of Raven taken after Wheeler’s assault (http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/dekalb-officer-investigated-after-allegedly-kickin/nNzDS/) displayed a huge bruise across Dozier’s abdomen. Two weeks later she gave birth to a son she named Levii by way of an emergency C-section.
In his official report of the incident, Wheeler did what police in such circumstances always do: He lied, claiming that he was dealing with an “aggressive” woman and that he used “a front push kick to the abdomen, as [I] was taught to do at the academy.” It was only after he arrested this “aggressive” woman that he supposedly noticed her condition.
“Her condition was obvious to everyone,” observes Dozier’s attorney, Mark Bullman (who is a retired police officer). “She had gained seventy pounds in this pregnancy. The incident took place in a well-lit area, and she had spent a great deal of time standing alongside the police officers, attempting to calm her brother down and resolve the situation.”
In June, Chicago resident Tiffany Rent (http://www.morrisdailyherald.com/2012/06/07/police-officer-uses-stun-gun-on-pregnant-woman/avyybls/?__xsl=/print.xsl), who was eight months pregnant, was tasered by a police officer during a dispute over a parking ticket. She had briefly parked in a handicapped-only space while her fiancé, Joseph Hobbs, went into a Walgreen’s store to buy batteries.
A cop who arrived on the scene wrote Rent a ticket, which the woman angrily tore to shreds. The officer then started to write a second citation for littering and demanded to know the woman’s name. She angrily refused to comply and got behind the wheel of the SUV. The officer shot her with his Taser, and then arrested Hobbs when he tried to intervene in defense of his fiancé and their unborn child. Both Hobbs and Rent were charged with misdemeanors.
Police superintendent Garry McCarthy characterized the officer’s Taser attack as a justified use of force to prevent what he called “an escape” by a suspect. A more honest characterization of the episode would be summary punishment for “contempt of cop,” as opposed to the necessary arrest of an actual criminal.
All three of these incidents involved women who were either entirely innocent (in the case of Raven Dozier) or suspected of non-violent offenses. Police actions of this kind in a foreign country would be condemned in a State Department human rights report. In the supposed Land of the Free they’re considered entirely appropriate.
Read more here (http://www.foxsanantonio.com/newsroom/top_stories/videos/vid_11031.shtml#.T_1_u1gfajk.email).

Cebu_4_2
13th July 2012, 12:48 AM
Elderly ex-nun files excessive force lawsuit against cop over nursing home assault Get short URL (http://rt.com/usa/news/nursing-home-bormann-officer-860/)
email story to a friend (http://rt.com/emailstory/?doc_id=95860&type_doc=1&referer=http%3A%2F%2Frt.com%2Fusa%2Fnews%2Fnursing-home-bormann-officer-860%2F) print version (http://rt.com/usa/news/nursing-home-bormann-officer-860/print/)
Published: 10 July, 2012, 23:02


http://rt.com/files/usa/news/nursing-home-bormann-officer-860/elizabeth-bormann.n.jpg

Elizabeth Bormann (Still from ABC6 video)

TAGS: Crime (http://rt.com/tags/crime/), USA (http://rt.com/tags/usa/), Police (http://rt.com/tags/police/)

A 76-year-old former nun has filed a lawsuit in Federal Court against a Columbus, Ohio police officer after being allegedly brutally assaulted and humiliated during a routine nursing home visit.
Elizabeth Bormann says that an officer with the Columbus Police Department knocked her to the ground and then handcuffed her while she tried to visit a 96-year-old friend confined to a bed at the Highbanks Care Center, WSYX News reports. She tells the ABC affiliate that she regularly drives 540 miles each week to visit the elderly friend, but things took an appalling turn during a visit a few months back.
When Bormann arrived at the nursing home on March 17, a staffer at the center told her that her friend’s legal guardian had made several changes to the list of approved visitors following a scam that cost the man’s family half a million dollars. Although investigators tell WSYX that Ms. Bormann isn’t believed to be involved in the swindling, her name was nonetheless added to the do-not-admit list.
"I told them that I needed to see (him) because I needed to tell (him) that my visitation had been (canceled). And of course he was very upset, but I needed to tell him," Bormann tells reporters.
The nursing home staff wasn’t all that understanding, though, and Bormann refused to leave until she was allowed to see her friend. That’s when the cops were called in.
Bormann tells the station that Columbus Police Officer Theodis N. Turner, III was dispatched to the nursing home to handle the situation. Bormann says the cop wasn’t willing to hear her side of the story, though.
"He said to me, 'I've had enough of you,' and he charged into me, basically, and somehow or the other, charged into my side, took my arm. It all happened so fast,” she tells WSYX.
"Before I know it, I was down on my knees and then, of course, I urinated, and I started a little crying, and pretty much I was just stunned.
"I was humiliated. I do believe that I've become a victim. It just was such a surprise and such a shock."
The spokesperson for the Columbus Division of Police insists that Bormann provoked the assault that and that, despite the officer’s demands for her to leave, "she resisted him the whole time."
When another officer arrived at scene, the second cop asked "Now this is why you call for backup?" court documents claim.
Bormann admitted guilt to a misdemeanor charge of criminal trespassing, but says the way the force handled the entire event was preposterous.
"It was quite traumatic for me, and then of course, it hurt," she says.
Bormann's attorney, Ashley Rutherford Starling, calls the entire incident “unbelievable.” She is helping the former school teacher and nun file a lawsuit that alleged the officer used excessive force and violated her client’s civil rights with the Federal Court for the Southern District of Ohio.

Cebu_4_2
13th July 2012, 12:52 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOQCeaPTTLI&feature=share

Gaillo
13th July 2012, 11:24 AM
Only the best.

The "thin blue line" between tyranny and even MORE tyranny.

Buddha
13th July 2012, 12:43 PM
I hated to "thank" that post, but this stuff has been happening increasingly for years, decades, and needs to be pointed out.