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NEVER Trust The Police

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Chief USA

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The story and the video speaks for itself.



And we thought this kind of crap only took place in Muslim and 3rd world counties:confused::eek:#@$%! Sorry about the long cut and past.





Woman Beat By Cop In Shreveport While In... - Care2 News Network



The Shreveport Times 3/302200001





The Shreveport Police Department has received at least two other excessive force complaints against an officer who recently was fired amid allegations that he beat a Mooringsport woman during a DWI arrest.



The most recent case drew national attention following the release of a police video that shows the handcuffed woman lying in a pool of blood in an interrogation room.



Wiley Willis, 30, was fired Feb. 5 after police investigated injuries, including a broken nose, to Angela Garbarino, who was arrested Nov. 17 on charges of DWI and hit and run. Willis' attorney said Garbarino was injured during a fall.



An unrelated lawsuit, filed in Caddo District Court in 2006 by Shreveporter Darlene Atkins, alleges Willis put his gun to the head of her son Dillon Freeman in 2005.

Atkins said Willis threatened to shoot Freeman if family members came closer to the pair. Her lawsuit states the incident happened after Willis pursued Freeman, who was riding a scooter, to the family's home.



Another lawsuit filed in 2006 alleges Willis arrested Shreveporter Tomeka Bush and had her car seized as retaliation for a complaint filed against him about the incident involving Freeman. Bush's lawsuit says she's related to Atkins and Freeman.



The lawsuit states video shot by Willis' patrol car camera was available to the Police Department for review. Bush said the department investigated but didn't discipline Willis.



The city has denied Willis acted inappropriately. Both lawsuits are pending. Shreveport attorney Ree Casey, who represents Atkins, said she is still researching the issues and hasn't talked to Bush.



Willis, who joined the Police Department in 2004, was put on paid administrative leave Jan. 24 after Police Chief Henry Whitehorn filed an internal affairs complaint into his handling of Garbarino's arrest. Willis was fired during a predisciplinary conference with Whitehorn.



The chief has said little publicly about the incident, and the department didn't file charges against Willis.



“After reviewing the evidence, we decided it was something that needed to be handled internally and that it was not enough to pursue criminal charges,” Whitehorn says in a prepared statement.



Whitehorn, who has scheduled a news conference Wednesday, did not return calls from The Times today.



Garbarino, 42, was taken into custody after someone saw her crash her vehicle into other cars in the Sam's Town casino parking garage and a light pole on Clyde Fant Memorial Parkway, according to police.



Video from the DWI room shows the woman in handcuffs and refusing to take a Breathalyzer. At one point, Willis slings her out of the camera's view; but the audio track records what sounds like something hitting a file cabinet.



Willis sits Garbarino down and walks away from her. Immediately after, Willis turns off the video equipment. When he turns it back on, the woman is lying in a pool of her blood, at times vomiting blood, the video shows.



“Oh, God. Somebody help me,” the woman says on the audio accompanying the video. “Somebody please help me. He beat the living **** out of me. ”



Paramedics took her to LSU Hospital in Shreveport, where she was treated for a broken nose, a fractured cheek bone and bruises on various parts of her body. Two of her teeth were knocked out.



Willis' attorney, Eron Brainard, was at the officer's internal affairs hearing but said the exact reason for his firing remains unclear.



However, Brainard said he later heard that Whitehorn fired his client for the treatment of the woman in general, not her injuries.



Brainard maintains Willis followed procedure and did not try to mistreat Garbarino. But she was “belligerent” and kept trying to leave the testing area, Brainard said.



In dealing with a DWI suspect, officers turn on a video camera to record the breath testing, according to police. Once that's done, they turn it off and go into another room for processing. The taping itself is to be used as evidence in court.



“After her refusal to take the breath test, officer Willis turned off and saved the videotape in accordance with normal practice,” Brainard said. “The suspect again tried to leave the room. In the process of (Willis) stopping her, she fell and injured herself. ”



Willis called 911 then turned the video camera back on, Brainard said. Blood was only on Garbarino and the floor, which supports Willis' version, Brainard said.



“Obviously, those pictures are brutal but he didn't brutalize her,” Brainard said.



Willis has appealed his firing and will go before the civil service board.



Attorney Ron Miciotto, who represents Garbarino, said his client was injured because the officer did not follow procedure in handling Garbarino.



As for the charges against her, Garbarino pleaded not guilty Dec. 20. Her trial date is March 20.



“There has not been an internal affairs complaint from Ms. Garbarino,” Mayor Cedric Glover said Tuesday.



As a state legislator, he sponsored bills that would have allowed Shreveport to create a citizens review board for complaints against the police.



A series of shootings in which police killed suspects, some of whom weren't armed, prompted a call for a closer look at the Police Department.



Today, Glover said his concern about a need for leadership in the Police Department prompted him to support the push for a review board.
 
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Yeah, never trust them. Ever. They're all bad. They're all horrible. They're all crooks. :rolleyes:



I'm not going to argue the merits of the post, but generalizing the bunch by some bad apples is rediculous.
 
Here is another example of a "perfectly honest mistake" made by a "highly trained" law enforcement "professional". The bailiff either did this intentionally or he is way beyond grossly criminally negligent.



Illegal Immigrant Left in Cell 4 Days | TimesDaily.com | Times Daily | Florence, AL



A bailiff is under an internal investigation after a woman spent four days forgotten in a holding cell without food, water or a toilet.







Bailiff Jarrod Hankins put Adriana Torres-Flores in the cell to await transport to jail Thursday and didn't let her out until Monday morning. No one on the fourth floor of the courthouse had heard her cries or her banging on the 2-inch-thick steel door of the 9 1/2-by-10 1/2-foot cell.







"There's nothing at all that indicates this was done intentionally," said Washington County Chief Deputy Jay Cantrell. "This was a very, very horrible accident. "







Torres-Flores, 38, arrested on charges of selling pirated CDs, had been ordered held by a judge because the Mexican immigrant is in the country illegally. On Monday she was taken to a hospital, where she was treated and released and allowed to go home, though she still faces deportation.







Torres-Flores told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette through an interpreter - her 14-year-old daughter - that she used a shoe as a pillow to sleep in the holding cell, which had two benches, a metal table and a light she could not turn off.







"She was feeling like she was going to die," said the daughter, Adriana Torres-Diaz.







"She had to use the bathroom on the floor," Torres-Diaz said. "She said she was so thirsty she had to drink her own urine. "







The bailiff meant to call the county jail for deputies to pick her up, but got pulled away back into court and forgot Torres-Flores was waiting inside the cell, Cantrell said.







The next day, snow blanketed Arkansas and the courthouse saw few employees come in for work, though both Hankins and the judge he works for, Circuit Judge William Storey, were there. No one checked the cell, as Storey did not hear cases all day, Cantrell said.







"They were just a few feet away from the cell, but they never heard anything. Nothing got their attention," Cantrell said.







As of Tuesday, Hankins, of Elkins, remained on administrative leave pending an internal investigation, Cantrell said. He described the bailiff as horrified over what happened.







"He's extremely distraught over it," Cantrell said. "He's not distraught over his job or anything like that, he's distraught about this woman that he caused her to be left in there for four days. "







A bailiff for about two months, Hankins started part-time work for the sheriff's department in 2005 and in 2006 began working as an adult detention officer.







Mexican consul Andres Chao said he visited Torres-Flores as she rested at home Tuesday. Chao said she still suffered from periodic headaches and stomach aches.







"At this moment, Adriana is alive," Chao said. "But after four days without water, without food, in a small room - it's unbelievable. "







Chao met Tuesday with Washington County Sheriff Tim Helder and county Judge Jerry Hunton to offer "the highest protest of the Mexican government. "







Torres-Flores will receive legal assistance from the consulate as her case moves on, Chao said. She pleaded not guilty in the criminal case against her and her trial is set for April 1.







Sheriff's office deputies guarding the courthouse now check the small room at the end of their shifts to make sure no one still sits inside, Cantrell said. Deputies also plan to install a video system for the cell, as well as a light alerting passers-by that the cell is occupied.
 
Hey Chief, there are plenty of other websites to campaign your anti-LEO rhetoric. Don't turn the TDR into another one. Please.
 
Hey Chief, there are plenty of other websites to campaign your anti-LEO rhetoric. Don't turn the TDR into another one. Please.



I am not "anti-Leo". I AM pro-constitution and pro-freedom and liberty as our constitution mandates. I swore an oath to uphold and defend this as a military officer as has EVERY LEO.



I have posted nothing untrue or inaccurate... ... ... there is no rhetoric in FACT. I realize there ARE good and outstanding LEO's out there. The sad reality and truth is that they are the extremely rare exception nowadays and their silence with respect to exposing the bad apples is deafening.



Perhaps these links are not shocking and repulsive to you... ... ... they are to me and I would think as well as hope ANY reasonable American who understands and holds their liberty and freedom dear.



If the truth offends you, perhaps you should consider why this is.
 
When are these idiot cops going to figure out that big brother is always watching? They still do the most stupid things and are caught red handed
 
While I cannot confirm or refute the accuracy of any of the news reports here, neither can I see where this thread will either change police behavior in any way, nor will it right any wrongs that have or may have been done.



What I do see is that the thread is fast heading to the wrong side of the guidelines regarding baiting and mean spirited posting. Therefore before this gets out of hand, I am closing the thread.



If any of the posters disagree with me, please contaxt TDRAdmin or Steve St. Laurent via PM. Yopu are also free to PM me and we can certainly discuss it.



Thank You



AC
 
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