Just this week a bodycam from NYC officer shows him planting drugs over 2 years ago. The person who's involved took a plea deal because they didn't want to risk going to jail for many years. The cop still has his job and this wasn't the first time.
Try getting a job in the US with a criminal record.
Fusion centers seem to be shared databases of threats that federal, state, and local agencies all contribute to.
Given the scale, it’s likely more of the focus is on organizations, not individuals.
Given the nature of internal misconduct, I think it’s safe to assume that wouldn’t be shared period, let alone in venues such as these.
In cases where it does need to be shared, e.g. covered up NYPD misconduct affects FBI case, I’d assume they have alternative means to this sort of spreadsheet-broadcast impression I’m getting of the centers.
Could be totally off, either way I suppose we’ll find out now.
This is a misnomer.
Cops are not actually "to protect and serve", and this has been proven in court.
Their function is to uphold the law. That's it.
Overall I agree though. This is the same baseless defense used against leaking of info on war crimes.
I doubt planting evidence is common, but it will nevertheless be interesting to dig through that. If it is true the cop is still serving, it should be a huge scandal. These practices need to be stomped out immediately.
And if they do end up going to court: " the court held that California police who stand accused of stealing $225,000 cannot be sued because they never were told specifically that stealing money from people’s homes violates the Constitution"
https://www.ocregister.com/2020/05/14/high-court-to-decide-i...
Who cares if it’s a huge scandal? I remember reading about the “scandal” years ago. The cop is still has his job and was never charged with a crime.
The cop broke the law multiple times on video, an innocent person suffered physical and mental harm. The cop caused harm to all of society by reducing the trust between members of society. Yet he has a job, one with power over others where his word matters more than others.
Hence the protests.
One of the reasons that the protests in the US are so widespread right now is that, fundamentally, this is the issue: that cop still serving isn't a scandal at all. The police look out for their own, and internal accountability for violating procedure is an absolute farce.
Still, a worthwhile read.
As I am no longer a member of the military, I am a civilian. My neighbors are civilians. And regardless of a badge or uniform or firearm or SWAT teams or Pentagon-surplus armored vehicles, cops are civilians.
Feeling otherwise merely reinforces the "us-versus-them" mentality that leads to the current crisis.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civilian
So sworn police officers are not normally considered civilians, while non-sworn personel are:
https://www.discoverpolicing.org/explore-the-field/types-of-...
https://www.discoverpolicing.org/explore-the-field/civilian-...
https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s/2017/crime-in-the-u.s.-...