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Porn Users Forum » A police officer was forced to resign after using force on an 11-year-old girl. |
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10-22-19 10:02pm - 1889 days | Original Post - #1 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
A police officer was forced to resign after using force on an 11-year-old girl. The officer should have drawn his gun and shot the 11-year-old girl in self-defense. She was clearly a threat to not only the police officer, but to her fellow students and the school staff. A clean, kill-shot to the head or heart would have made the school a safer place. This was an intelligent cop. He was clearly heard saying "Stop resisting" multiple times. That alone justified him throwing the girl against the wall, and then forcing her to the ground. The cop also said the girl assaulted the school staff. But the school staff, the ninnies, denied they were assaulted. Don't they realize they are supposed to support their local police? No matter what? ------- ------- Video allegedly shows police officer roughing up 11-year-old girl NBC News Theo Wayt Oct 22nd 2019 8:01PM A New Mexico school resource officer has resigned after allegedly using excessive force against an 11-year-old girl who he alleges "took more milks than she was supposed to" from the cafeteria. Lapel video of the Aug. 27 incident involving Farmington police officer Zach Christensen, an 11-year veteran of the department released Monday, appears to show him shoving the crying sixth grader into a wall. The child then falls to the ground and Christensen can be heard yelling, "Stop resisting" multiple times. The officer continues to struggle with the girl, not allowing her to stand up while asking her to put her hands behind her back. At one point, as Christiansen stands over the girl, gripping her arm, a school administrator intervenes, saying, “Officer Christiansen, she is not a threat to yourself or others.” Christiansen replies, “No. She is.” Eventually, the administrator tries to talk him down, saying, “Sir, we are not going to use excessive force to get this done.” Christiansen then yells, “We’re not excessive!” Farmington Police Department Chief Steve Hebbe condemned Christiansen’s actions and confirmed his removal from the department on Monday in a video posted to Facebook, saying, “There’s no excuse for the way this girl was treated.” Hebbe said that Christensen alleged that the child assaulted school staff, but added, "this proved not to be true." The officer was placed on administrative leave following the incident and an internal affairs review revealed that he had made policy violations, Hebbe said. Hebbe also told NBC News that his department referred the case to the New Mexico state police, but that the local district attorney declined to pursue charges. However, the Attorney General of New Mexico may open an investigation, Hebbe said. On Sept. 24, Officer Christiansen informed the department of his plans to resign effective Oct. 1. Christiansen’s supervisor, who has not been named, took a voluntary demotion and was been reassigned to street patrol after failing to "identify the incident as unacceptable", Hebbe said in his video statement. The confrontation apparently started with an incident in the school cafeteria involving milk. “This morning, she went straight to the cafeteria,” Christiansen can be heard saying in the video. “She took more milks than she was supposed to. She threw a milk on the ground.” Asked how he plans to prevent incidents like this in the future, Police Chief Hebbe said, “That’s tough. We already feel like we have a pretty robust system in place.” But he says the department plans to review its use-of-force training. Mark Carnutt, the girl’s attorney, told NBC News he has filed a notice of tort claim, which in New Mexico is often a precursor to filing a lawsuit. “If a parent was doing that same thing, wouldn’t they be charged?” Carnutt said. “Is there a different standard for which police are considered for committing crimes versus other people?” | |
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10-24-19 04:19pm - 1887 days | #2 | |
biker (0)
Active User Posts: 632 Registered: May 03, '08 Location: milwaukee, wi |
They need to sue. When the taxpayers get tired of paying the bills for this kind of bullshit it will change. Just complaining does not make a change. You have to hit people in the wallet. Commonsense or an appeal to decent morality never makes changes. Money or losing money does the talking. Also charging the officer with assault. But you must get the taxpayers attention buy suing the city for allowing this to happen. It is great to see this posted. This is not the only place I have seen this incident posted at. It is getting seen. Warning Will Robinson | |
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10-26-19 08:30am - 1886 days | #3 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
Video shows cop shooting and killing an unarmed 16-year-old who was running away. The cop was justified in the shooting, according to Fresno police department and the city of Fresno's police auditor. The fatal bullet entered the back of the teenagers head as he was running away. But police have the right to shoot to kill, in self defense. The teen might have been running to find a gun, to shoot someone else. Or, maybe, he might have been running to find a gun, to shoot a cop. Horrors! --------- --------- Video shows officer shoot an unarmed 16-year-old as he runs away. Police say it was justified Eric Levenson By Sarah Moon and Eric Levenson, CNN (CNN)Newly released video of a fatal police shooting in April 2017 shows an officer firing a deadly shot at an unarmed 16-year-old who had jumped over a fence and was running away. Police in Fresno, California, say that three different official departments have ruled the shooting justified. The surveillance camera footage, provided by attorney Stuart Chandler, shows 16-year-old Isiah Murrietta Golding climb a fence and enter a small yard as he is being chased by two officers. Murrietta Golding, wearing a gray sweater, lands on his feet and starts to run. One officer climbs the fence while the other gets into a crouching stance and fires through the fence, the video shows. Murrietta Golding then stumbles and falls to the ground. In the police body camera footage, also provided by the attorney, someone off camera can be heard saying "good shot." Murrietta Golding's parents filed separate wrongful death lawsuits against the city of Fresno and several of its officers in March 2018. Chandler, who represents Murrietta Golding's father, said the suits were filed separately because the couple are divorced. The bullet went through the back of the teen's head, according to the father's lawsuit, and he died three days later. The lawsuit claims the officer who fired had no "objective facts" to believe that Murrietta Golding was armed or reaching for a weapon. The teen was unarmed, the lawsuit states. "The fact that the police department and the city of Fresno's police auditor all agreed that this shooting was justified is troubling in light of the video that clearly shows that it's not," Chandler told CNN. Lawsuit: Teen wanted for questioning Citing police statements, the father's lawsuit says that Murietta Golding was wanted for questioning in connection with a shooting one day earlier that had caused a fatal car crash. Fresno Police sought to question the teenager and pulled over a car in which he was a passenger, the lawsuit states. The teenagers in the car initially complied with police. But Murietta Golding then took off running, the lawsuit states, leading to the fatal chase. Fresno Police Chief Andrew Hall told CNN affiliate KSEE that the shooting was ruled justified by police's Internal Affairs Bureau, the Fresno County District Attorney's Office and the City of Fresno's Office of Independent Review. "The use of lethal force in this case occurred while officers were investigating a homicide. The 16-year-old in this case was involved in the homicide with his brother and the brother was later arrested and pled guilty," Hall said. "The (surveillance) video represents a different vantage point and was not what the pursuing officers could see. The 16-year-old was also known to carry firearms and had jumped a fence into a child daycare center." CNN has reached out to the Fresno Police Department and the Office of Independent Review for comment. | |
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