Cops behaving badly ...

The familiar paraphrase:
- Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely. - Lord Acton



Why do you suppose such persons chose police work? A U.S. government paycheck is a license to kill.


When in U.S. history have government agents functioned so shamefully? Koramatsu?

Let's not overlook the facts. Trump's federal "agents" are not in uniform, wearing masks, and murdering citizens.

The Koramatsu case was interesting and I had not heard of it before.
{...
Fred Korematsu, 23, was a Japanese-American citizen who did not comply with the order to leave his home and job, despite the fact that his parents had abandoned their home and their flower-nursery business in preparation for reporting to a camp. Korematsu planned to stay behind. He had plastic surgery on his eyes to alter his appearance; changed his name to Clyde Sarah; and claimed that he was of Spanish and Hawaiian descent.
...}
 
"Fred Korematsu, 23, ... had plastic surgery " R5 #361
Fred Korematsu, 23, ... had plastic surgery in a failed attempt to circumvent the government agents determined to usurp his Constitutional rights.

Some may have witnessed a veteran's contingent at an Independence Day celebration, and may have noticed a silent tear shed from a member of that group.
It may confirm pseudo-patriotic bias to misinterpret that silent tear as an unqualified endorsement of United States governments.

But more objective, better informed observation may recognize it might instead be an acknowledgement of failure.

All men are created equal? Tell it to MLK.

We won't be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law?

- piffle -
 
Sounds like the cop was upset that his was smaller than Aunt Tifa's

1775500016567.png

A grandmother wore an inflatable penis costume to a protest in Alabama. Now they’re trying to put her in jail.

62 year-old Renea Gamble bought the costume at Spirit Halloween. She put it on, grabbed a homemade sign that read "No Dick Tator," and showed up to a No Kings rally in Fairhope, Alabama, last October.

A thousand people came out in deep-red Baldwin County. There were unicorns. There was a blow-up chicken. And there was Gamble, a 7-foot inflatable penis holding an American flag.

Everybody was laughing. Except Corporal Andrew Babb of the Fairhope Police Department.

Body camera footage shows what happened next. Babb pulls up in his SUV, marches past other protesters, and points straight at Gamble.

He tells her the costume is unacceptable. She asks if she's being detained. He ignores the question and keeps scolding her. She turns to walk away. He grabs her from behind and throws her on the ground.

Two more officers help pin her down and handcuff her. She screams in pain as they try to stuff her into a squad car, the inflatable costume too big to fit through the door.

When they peeled the suit off and asked for her name, she said, "Aunt Tifa."

The video went viral. It aired on Colbert. A local radio station held a listener poll for Alabamian of the Year and "Inflatable Fairhope Protest Penis" won.

Everyone assumed the charges would quietly disappear once someone with sense intervened.

Instead, the city doubled down. Prosecutors added more charges. “Disturbing the peace”. “Giving a false name”. Her trial is set for April 15.

Her lawyer, David Gespass, a veteran civil rights attorney, called the whole thing "absurd." There are no witnesses, no recordings showing her breaking any law. The officer's own report says he responded to complaints about "traffic hazards," not anything Gamble did. No provision of Fairhope's disorderly conduct ordinance covers wearing a costume. Gespass filed a motion to dismiss. The judge denied it in a single line.

The mayor backed the arrest before seeing the evidence: "This type of behavior or display is not acceptable and will not be tolerated in Fairhope." A local Moms for Liberty activist celebrated on Facebook, calling Gamble's behavior "typical ANTIFA."

Meanwhile, the No Kings protests in Fairhope have grown. The most recent rally drew nearly 1,200 people. They put up barricades this time. The protest advertised itself as the "Official Site of # PenisGate." Signs read "Free Speech is A-PEEling" and "Don't Be a Meanie, It's Just a Weenie."

And Gamble showed up again. Masked, in sunglasses and a bandana. Carrying the same "No Dick Tator" sign. Wearing another inflatable costume.

A cop threw a grandmother on the ground for wearing a Halloween costume at a protest. The city is prosecuting her for it. She showed up again anyway. That's what resistance looks like.

SOURCE with comments
 
1778355100155.png

Just IMAGINE if this was nationwide...

In a unanimous 14-0 vote on Wednesday, May 6, 2026, the Los Angeles City Council approved a motion urging the independent Board of Police Commissioners to direct the Los Angeles Police Department to substantially limit the use of pretextual traffic stops for a specific list of minor vehicle infractions. Under the recommended guidelines, LAPD officers would generally be prohibited from initiating pulls for issues such as expired registration tags, non-functioning tail lights, cracked windshields, broken sideview mirrors, illegal window tint, loud exhaust systems, or missing license plates—unless the violation poses a clear and immediate threat to public safety on the roadways.

The council’s action, which builds upon a similar departmental policy first introduced in 2022 requiring officers to articulate additional reasons beyond the minor violation itself, stems from data presented during deliberations showing that these types of stops have disproportionately involved Black and Latino drivers relative to their representation in the city’s population.

Proponents described the measure as an effort to promote more equitable policing practices, reduce potentially contentious officer-resident interactions, and address longstanding community concerns about racial disparities in traffic enforcement.

Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson, a key supporter of the proposal, emphasized the need to focus law enforcement resources on violations that present genuine safety risks rather than routine equipment or registration matters.

The resolution now moves to the civilian Police Commission for further review and potential adoption into department policy, meaning the changes are not yet formally in effect but are expected to shape enforcement priorities in the near term if approved.

SOURCE
 
View attachment 4938

Just IMAGINE if this was nationwide...

In a unanimous 14-0 vote on Wednesday, May 6, 2026, the Los Angeles City Council approved a motion urging the independent Board of Police Commissioners to direct the Los Angeles Police Department to substantially limit the use of pretextual traffic stops for a specific list of minor vehicle infractions. Under the recommended guidelines, LAPD officers would generally be prohibited from initiating pulls for issues such as expired registration tags, non-functioning tail lights, cracked windshields, broken sideview mirrors, illegal window tint, loud exhaust systems, or missing license plates—unless the violation poses a clear and immediate threat to public safety on the roadways.

The council’s action, which builds upon a similar departmental policy first introduced in 2022 requiring officers to articulate additional reasons beyond the minor violation itself, stems from data presented during deliberations showing that these types of stops have disproportionately involved Black and Latino drivers relative to their representation in the city’s population.

Proponents described the measure as an effort to promote more equitable policing practices, reduce potentially contentious officer-resident interactions, and address longstanding community concerns about racial disparities in traffic enforcement.

Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson, a key supporter of the proposal, emphasized the need to focus law enforcement resources on violations that present genuine safety risks rather than routine equipment or registration matters.

The resolution now moves to the civilian Police Commission for further review and potential adoption into department policy, meaning the changes are not yet formally in effect but are expected to shape enforcement priorities in the near term if approved.

SOURCE

Actually all these things were use excuses for police to extort money from people.
Burned out tail lights are the only one that actually effects safety.
Plates should not really cost anything.
I just paid $175 for new registration.
Just a scam.
 
In fairness I haven't verified these numbers

698583573_10240547647213564_7637546318673205411_n.jpg
 
Since our top cops these days seem to be the FBI, Kash Patel has been interesting:
The Atlantic Daily, but David Grahm
{...
During a Senate subcommittee hearing today, Democrats tried a variety of avenues to pin down FBI Director Kash Patel on reports about the bureau—about politicization of law enforcement as well as his personal conduct—but it was a simple question from Senator Chris Van Hollen at the end that produced the most telling response.

“Do you know that it is a crime to lie to Congress?” the Maryland Democrat asked.

Patel scowled and loudly reshuffled papers at his table. “I have not lied to Congress,” he said. He accused the senator of lying. He refused to look up. But as Van Hollen noted, Patel repeatedly sidestepped the actual question.

“The director of the FBI apparently does not want to answer the question about whether or not it’s a crime to lie to Congress, and I find that extremely troubling,” Van Hollen said. “You are a disgrace, Mr. Director.”

The exchange was a fiery end to a hearing that began with a bizarre exchange between Van Hollen and Patel but drifted into an odd stasis in the middle. The hearing, which also featured the leaders of the Drug Enforcement Agency, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, might otherwise have been a drab budget discussion, except that it was also senators’ first chance to question Patel on a series of recent press reports.

In mid-April, my colleague Sarah Fitzpatrick reported on concerns inside the Trump administration about what FBI sources described as excessive drinking and unexplained absences. (In a follow-up story, Fitzpatrick also reported on the personalized bourbon bottles Patel has handed out as gifts.) Patel has denied the allegations in Fitzpatrick’s initial story and sued Fitzpatrick and The Atlantic for defamation, demanding $250 million; MS NOW also reported last week that Fitzpatrick was the focus of an FBI criminal-leak investigation, a development the FBI rejects as “completely false.” Earlier this spring, several outlets also reported that Patel had fired agents from a task force that monitored threats from Iran—just days before the Trump administration launched a war against Iran—because they’d been involved in an investigation into the president’s alleged removal of classified documents to Mar-a-Lago. (Patel has denied these reports, saying that the agents were fired for unspecified violations of “ethical obligations.”)

“Director Patel, I don’t care one bit about your private life, and I don’t give a damn about what you do on your own time and on your own dime unless and until it interferes with your public responsibilities,” Van Hollen said in his opening statement. The allegations, if true, “demonstrate a gross dereliction of your duty,” he said.

The director responded with vitriol and scorn. “The only person that was slinging margaritas in El Salvador on the taxpayer dollar with a convicted gangbanging rapist was you,” Patel said. The director appeared to be referring to a visit that Van Hollen made to El Salvador, where he met with Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an imprisoned immigrant whom the administration acknowledged it had mistakenly deported. (He has since been returned to the United States, though the administration is now trying to deport him to Liberia.) Photos of the meeting released by the Salvadoran government showed glasses on a table with salt rims and cherries, but Van Hollen has said no one was drinking alcohol. The reference to “a convicted gangbanging rapist” is nonsensical; Abrego Garcia has been indicted for human smuggling (he has pleaded not guilty), but no evidence shows that he has ever been convicted of rape.

Other Democrats followed up with questions of their own. When Senator Chris Coons asked about the cost of Patel’s trip to Milan during the Olympics, when he was taped chugging beer in a locker room with the U.S. hockey team, Patel just didn’t answer. Coons also inquired about the firing of agents, but Patel said he didn’t believe the reporting. “Do you disagree that there were 10 Iran specialists dismissed right before the war began?” a perplexed Coons asked. “Yes,” Patel said. When Senator Patty Murray cited figures showing that FBI agents had been reassigned to immigration enforcement, Patel categorically denied that, too.

Committee Republicans, meanwhile, mostly opted to ignore the reports altogether, although Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana plied Patel with softballs such as “Is it important that you go out there and travel and talk to our line agents and try to maintain morale?”
...}
 
Back
Top