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  • FTP? You decide...

    Read this article in Rolling Stone this weekend and thought some of you here would be interested. It's a bit long, but covers a lot of the typical "FTP" topics that have been addressed here as well.

    I only posted the first few paragraphs, but encourage you to read the whole story.

    Over the past five years, police in Albuquerque have shot and killed 28 people and brutalized many others. Inside a department gone wild.


    When Cops Break Bad: Inside a Police Force Gone Wild
    Over the past five years, police in Albuquerque have shot and killed 28 people
    By Nick Pinto | January 29, 2015




    Looking west from the scrub and boulders of the Sandia Mountains, the city of Albuquerque, New Mexico, sprawls across the valley of the Rio Grande, surrounded by the vast openness of the high desert. On the city's eastern edge, the winding roads and cul-de-sacs of tony subdivisions in the Northeast Heights abruptly give way to the foothills of the mountains, whose sharp red peaks tower over the city.

    On the afternoon of March 16th, 2014, Albuquerque police received a 911 call from this part of town, a man complaining that someone was illegally camping in the foothills. Two Albuquerque officers responded and, sure enough, encountered James Matthew Boyd, a 38-year-old homeless man who suffered from schizophrenia. Boyd was clearly not well, ranting, telling police that he was an agent for the Defense Department.

    Unauthorized camping is a petty misdemeanor. The officers could have told Boyd to move along and left it at that. But as Officer John McDaniel approached, Boyd wouldn't show his hands and McDaniel drew his gun. When the officers moved to pat him down, Boyd pulled out two small knives; the cops stepped back and called for backup, setting off a spectacular circus, with as many as 40 police officers reportedly joining the standoff. Among them were uniformed cops and members of the SWAT team, the tactical K-9 unit and the Repeat Offender Project squad.

    Not present, Boyd's family would later allege in a complaint, was anyone clearly in charge. Keeping Boyd surrounded, often with guns drawn, officers tried to get him to surrender his knives. Finally, after three hours, Boyd prepared to come down from the hills. "Don't worry about safety," he told the police. "I'm not a fucking murderer." But as Boyd packed his stuff, both hands full of possessions, Detective Keith Sandy — who hours before, on arriving at the scene, boasted on tape that he was going to shoot "this fucking lunatic" with a Taser shotgun — tossed a flash-bang grenade, a nonlethal weapon designed to disorient and distract. Another officer fired a Taser at Boyd, and a third released a police dog on him. Boyd drew his knives again. Advancing on him, officers ordered Boyd to get down on the ground. Boyd began to turn away, and Detective Sandy of the ROP squad and Officer Dominique Perez of the SWAT team each fired three live rounds at him, hitting him once in the back and twice in his arms. Boyd collapsed, face down, crying out that he was unable to move. "Please don't hurt me," he said. Another officer fired three beanbag rounds from a shotgun at Boyd's prone body. The K-9 officer again loosed his German shepherd on Boyd, and the dog tore into his legs. Finally, officers approached and handcuffed him.

    After roughly 20 minutes, Boyd was transported in an ambulance to the University of New Mexico hospital. In the final hours of his life, Boyd had his right arm amputated and his spleen, a section of his lung and a length of his intestines removed. At 2:55 a.m., he was pronounced dead. He was the 22nd person killed by the Albuquerque police in just more than four years.

    Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/...#ixzz3QblwWhQM
    Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

  • #2

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    • #3
      Cops have been getting away with murder for years...they're gonna continue until they are personally held accountable for their actions...ie, jail time and lawsuits against them personally.

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      • #4
        BTW, the story isn't only about that one incident, it's really about the Albuquerque PD as a whole.

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        • #5
          Two officers in that case were charged with murder, and rightfully so.

          Two Albuquerque police officers will face murder charges in last year’s shooting of a homeless man in the hills above the city, a prosecutor says.


          APD is under a close watch by the feds because of their propensity to shoot folks.

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          • #6
            What would you do ?

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            • #7
              Originally posted by lincolnboy View Post
              What would you do ?
              Not kill the person.

              It is remarkably easy to not kill people. I have been doing it all my life.
              Originally posted by lincolnboy
              After watching Games of Thrones, makes me glad i was not born in those years.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by racrguy View Post
                APD is under a close watch by the feds because of their propensity to shoot folks.
                Yeah, the story goes into a lot of that, but still questions whether it is really enough, or making any positive impact. From the story:

                ...The Justice Department investigation gave rise to some optimism that the APD and city government might finally recognize that they have a problem and undertake real reform. That hope was kindled further when, four months after the DOJ's announcement that it would be opening an investigation, Schultz declared his intention to retire as police chief. But close observers of the department saw reasons to be skeptical that anything was really improving.

                For one thing, changes in the police leadership weren't exactly encouraging. Mayor Berry selected Gordon Eden, a politically connected former U.S. marshal who had most recently headed up the Department of Public Safety under Republican Gov. Susana Martinez. Upon his appointment, Eden promised a proactive reform campaign to "take the department well beyond any findings the DOJ has." But Eden's subsequent actions proved disappointing and baffling to many.

                Two days before the DOJ singled out the city's SWAT team for special criticism in its blistering report, Eden announced that his deputy chief would be Robert Huntsman, who had spent 10 years as the APD lieutenant in charge of special units, including SWAT. A month later, Eden made another top-level appointment, promoting Tim Gonterman to major. Eight years earlier, a federal jury had awarded a homeless African-American man named Jerome Hall $300,000 in a suit alleging that Gonterman, then a patrol officer, had applied a Taser to the unarmed Hall so relentlessly that Hall was eventually hospitalized with burns to his face, stomach, back, neck, shoulders and calf. According to his lawyer, Hall also lost part of his ear to the Taser burns.

                "I've used Tasers," says Klein, the former officer. "The only way you can burn someone's ear off is if you're torturing them. And that guy's a major now!"...

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by DOHCTR View Post
                  Not kill the person.

                  It is remarkably easy to not kill people. I have been doing it all my life.
                  Me too! As I type this, I am sitting in my chair not killing anyone.
                  I don't like Republicans, but I really FUCKING hate Democrats.


                  Sex with an Asian woman is great, but 30 minutes later you're horny again.

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                  • #10
                    They basically killed him for being mentally ill. I'll never say FTP to all cops, but fuck those cops.
                    ZOMBIE REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT 2016!!! heh

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by YALE View Post
                      They basically killed him for being mentally ill. I'll never say FTP to all cops, but fuck those cops.
                      That's eerily similar to the situation in Dallas where the schizophrenic dude was sitting in a chair in his cul-de-sac and the cops blasted him within 15 seconds of pulling up. The guy did have a knife, but the cops said he was advancing and threatening them with it, which the video showed to be untrue.
                      When the government pays, the government controls.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by 46Tbird View Post
                        That's eerily similar to the situation in Dallas where the schizophrenic dude was sitting in a chair in his cul-de-sac and the cops blasted him within 15 seconds of pulling up. The guy did have a knife, but the cops said he was advancing and threatening them with it, which the video showed to be untrue.
                        Yup. If you have him talked down, then don't escalate force after the fact.
                        ZOMBIE REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT 2016!!! heh

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                        • #13
                          I've been faced with three easily justifiable shoots so far. Guess what, I've still yet to drop the hammer on anyone. That one dude shot by camping just bothers me.

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                          • #14
                            Fuck the police till you need one.

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                            • #15
                              So avoid Albuquerque. ....check.
                              sigpic

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