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Posted in Audio on June 26th, 2007“and when the music hits I feel no pain”
Non Phixion - The CIA Is Trying To Kill Me
big thanx to the703
<3
KillPolice.com staff
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“and when the music hits I feel no pain”
Non Phixion - The CIA Is Trying To Kill Me
big thanx to the703
<3
KillPolice.com staff
NEW ORLEANS
A New Orleans police officer was taken to Tulane Hospital on Wednesday afternoon after being injured in a routine traffic stop, officials said.
According to police at the scene, the driver of the vehicle got out near North Robertson and Port streets, but 23-year-old Christopher Francis jumped into the driver’s seat and sped off.
The officer’s arm was caught on the car, police said, and he was dragged six to eight blocks. He suffered cuts and bruises but is expected to recover.
Investigators said once police caught up with the car, Francis pointed a gun at them, so one officer shot at him.
Francis threw the gun off a bridge over some railroad tracks, police said.
He then headed into the Lower Ninth Ward, where he rammed into a police car in pursuit, injuring two officers, according to officials. Their injuries were classified as minor.
Following the collision, Francis reversed direction and headed back toward downtown New Orleans, traveling over the bridge again, police said. He eventually was stopped at an intersection near where the incident began.
Francis suffered some minor injuries in the chase, officials said.
He has been charged with attempted murder of police officers and traffic violations, in addition to attachments from St. James and Orleans parishes. Officials said most attachments mean the person didn’t show up for various court cases.
The original driver of the car, 47-year-old Curtis Newton, faces traffic violations, police said.
June 20th 2007
San Angelo, Texas
Police are investigating the firey death of a man who burst into flames after dousing himself in petrol and then being shot with a taser gun.
Officers used the gun after the man had poured gasoline over himself.
Juan Flores Lopez, 47, died on Tuesday at a hospital in Texas.
Police initially used pepper spray when they tried to take Lopez into custody. Then they used the Taser. Some stun guns emit an electric spark when they deliver the jolt of electricity.The Texas Rangers were also investigating whether a lighter that was on the porch could have contributed to the fire.
“We don’t know what ignited the fire,” police said.
No one else was injured in the confrontation. It was unclear whether Lopez had been charged with anything.
Two of his sons who live nearby said their father had been threatening for months to burn himself and his house. His wife was seeking a divorce and he did not want to have to leave the house, the sons said.
Source:AP
Posted By:
huffgas
West Memphis, AR
A 12-year-old boy who was carrying a toy gun was shot to death Friday evening by a West Memphis police officer, who apparently thought the gun was real.
Police Chief Bob Paudert said officers were on surveillance at an apartment building near a hotel about 10 p.m. when the boy appeared.
“The child had a toy pistol that looked identical to a real weapon. He did have a toy pistol with him and the officer saw it and fired shots. Two shots, I think,” Paudert told the Memphis (Tenn.) Commercial Appeal. “It’s a very tragic and unfortunate incident that happened.”
The child, whose name was not released, died at the scene, Paudert said. The officer, who was not identified, was placed on suspension with pay, pending an investigation.
Arkansas State Police spokesman Bill Sadler confirmed Saturday that the state police were investigating the fatal shooting of a boy by a West Memphis police officer. He did not provide further details, but said once the “use of force investigation” was completed the findings would be turned over to the local prosecutor to determine if charges are warranted.
Paudert did not immediately return a call Saturday.
According to a local television station, there were two boys and two police officers involved in the incident. Police were in the area because of a rash of armed robberies, the station reported. West Memphis Police Assistant Chief Mike Allen said when two police officers approached the boys, the officers saw a gun.
“When the police confronted the 12-year-old and told him to drop the weapon, he made a gesture toward the officers and (they) fired,” Allen said.
The other boy, a 14-year-old, was not injured.
The police chief said the officer who shot the boy has been with the department for more than 10 years. “He is taking it very hard right now,” Paudert said.
Since the incident involved an officer, Paudert asked the Arkansas State Police to investigate.
“We’re all saddened by the fact that this happened. But it will be thoroughly investigated by the state police,” Paudert said
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AP)

A former New Orleans police officer charged in the videotaped beating of a man after Hurricane Katrina apparently shot himself to death about a month before his trial, authorities said Monday.
The body of Lance Schilling, 30, was found Sunday in a suburban Metairie home. An autopsy showed he died of a gunshot wound to the roof of the mouth, Jefferson Parish coroner’s office said.
Schilling and another former officer were accused of beating Robert Davis, 64, a retired school teacher who had returned to New Orleans to check on his property several weeks after the storm.
An Associated Press Television News team recorded Davis being kneed and struck at least four times on the head by two police officers the night of October 8, 2005.
Davis was booked on municipal charges of public intoxication, resisting arrest, battery on a police officer and public intimidation. All charges were later dropped.
Schilling’s attorney, Franz Zibilich, said he was saddened by his client’s death. He believed the suspected suicide had no connection to the pending trial, which had been set for June 29. The former officer faced five years behind bars if convicted of second-degree battery charge.
“The truth be known, he was looking forward to having this matter tried and heard,” Zibilich said.
New Orleans police spokesman Marlon Defillo said Schilling had not been with the department since December 2005.
COVINGTON, La. –
A falling tree hit a St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s patrol car during a funeral procession Wednesday, killing one of the deputies inside and injuring the other.
Hospital officials said both deputies were taken to St. Tammany Parish Hospital, where Cpl. Linden “Beau” Raimer was pronounced dead.
Deputy Marylin “Mary” Mayo was taken to Tulane Medical Center with spinal injuries. She’s listed in critical condition, Sheriff Jack Strain said.
The sheriff’s office was already mourning the loss of another deputy killed in an on-duty wreck over the weekend. Deputy Hilery A Mayo Jr. — no relation to Marylin Mayo — was responding to a call at about 8 a.m. Saturday when he lost control of his vehicle and hit a tree.
Raimer and Mayo were part of a funeral procession for their colleague.
Severe weather moved through the area Wednesday afternoon, downing trees along Tyler Street and streets in the area of 19th to 23rd avenues.
A home and another vehicle were also damaged.
At one point, about 25 percent of Covington homes were without power.
I don’t if you are but I am sick and tire of these corrupt government officials and crooked cops here in Pennsylvania. Back in November I was pulled over by a West Mifflin cop that said he pulled me over because I had an air freshener hanging from my rear view mirror. I had a gun in my car that was registered and I had a license to carry it. Somehow this gay frosted blonde fag managed to see it when he pulled me over unlawfully. He pulled his gun on me and demanded that I tell him that I should have told him that I had a gun in the car. This gutless-punk- coward had been following me around all night, tailgating me. In the end he told me I was free to go, however when I arrived home I researched the traffic violations to learn none occured. I guess the fag-motherfucker wanted my phone number or something. Anyway I filed a complaint with the cheif of police and the mayor and they did nothing to this punk-cop, even though he illegally searched my vehicle and threatened to shoot me for no reason. I guess he must have blew them to keep his job. If your looking for justice in Pennsylvania, your looking in the wrong place, that’s it you guessed it, a police state. There are several brotherhoods and masonic lodges in PA that separate themselves from the regular society to a secret society. Its called the wink and the nod. If you belong to the same brotherhood as a judge or cop or lawyer, you need not worry about legal problems. Scottish rights masons, the fraternal order of police, Freemasons, etc are all brotherhoods and if you don’t participate in this human monopoly, you are screwed. The legal system here has also been monopolized. Kind of like Judge Manning and Pat Thomassey; you take notice that this shyster always comes out a winner when he appears before his friend judge. Stephen Zappala pulled strings with the feds to charge cyril wecht with merit less crimes, just because he did his job by informing him that police misconduct resulted in the murders of the people that the police apprehended. Ever wonder why judges dislike it when you wear a hat to court. Under roman law only people that were free were permitted to wear head coverings. Makes you wonder don’t it.
Posted By:
Bro
The Toronto Star obtained the letter sent by William Gilmour, who used to be a Mountie.
Gilmour writes in the letter that at least six, and as many as 12 current and former Mounties, want to be subpoenaed by a House of Commons committee so that they have some legal and job protection if they testify, reports the Star.
“My clients are of the view that a public inquiry is required to delve into all of the things that presently plague the morale of the men and women serving our national police service,” wrote Gilmour.
If called, Gilmour says testimony will include allegations of: “Subversion of an investigation into corruption and nepotism” in purchasing and contracting practices, and “the falsification of signatures to pay out money, on the part of government officials” in the New Brunswick government.
The letter also claims there are allegations that senior Mounties carried out criminal acts against other members of the force through electronic surveillance and the alteration of documents “to achieve improper goals.”
Money was also used to finance the vendettas of managers against targeted members, says the letter.
Additional allegations include:
* Evidence was deliberately covered up in the case against former RCMP officer Staff Sgt. Clifford McCann and others implicated in the abuse of young boys at the now-defunct Kingsclear Youth Training Centre in New Brunswick.
* Superior officers interfered in the political campaigns of RCMP members seeking government election, some by “spying on constituency meetings.'’
* RCMP members were harassed based on their sexual orientation.
* RCMP management regularly used punitive transfers
* Psychological “warfare'’ by certain officers against lower ranking members.
The RCMP has recently been plagued by scandals on a variety of fronts.
Last December, Giuliano Zaccardelli resigned as RCMP commissioner after giving conflicting testimony to a Commons committee probing the Maher Arar case.
In April, Zaccardelli appeared before a parliamentary committee and denied his involvement in an alleged cover-up of the possible mismanagement of the RCMP pension fund.
Actions by the RCMP are also being probed in the Air India inquiry and in the cases of Abdullah Almalki, Ahmad El Maati and Muayyed Nureddin — three Canadians tortured in Syria and Egypt.
The three men deny accusations of having terrorist links and they blame faulty intelligence from the RCMP and CSIS for their mistreatment abroad.
Originally published June 8, 2007
Wearing masks and carrying rifles, Annapolis police officers attempting to execute a search warrant broke down the door of an apartment, set off a percussion grenade that released smoke and a flash of light and noise, and kicked one occupant in the groin.
Then they realized that they were at the wrong address.
The botched raid startled a Salvadoran immigrant couple with limited English who were cooking dinner. They thought their home was being burglarized when about a dozen police officers converged on their Annapolis apartment about 8:20 p.m. Wednesday.
Police acknowledged their error at a news conference last night.
Earlier yesterday, the occupants were still shaken. They cried as they gave their account to a lawyer and a past president of the nonprofit Hispanic assistance organization Centro de Ayuda in the group’s offices.
“I cannot even imagine how these people must have felt when they saw these police point their guns at them,” Mary Schumaker, a past president of Centro de Ayuda, said yesterday.
She said the raid was terrifying and an outrage, especially for people who moved to the United States from a country once known for violence against its citizens.
She called it particularly troubling for the city’s growing Hispanic population as she and others try to build trust between Latino newcomers and authorities.
The woman, Silvia Bernal 30, was handcuffed, and her husband, Elmer Rene Perez, was kicked in the groin.
Police said yesterday that they are investigating what went wrong.
“Through miscommunication and misinformation, the serving of the warrant did not go as planned,” the Annapolis Police Department said in a statement.
The couple live in Building 905 of the Spa Cove Apartments on Primrose Road. The search warrant was for the apartment with the same number in Building 901.
Each brick building in the complex has its number on a royal blue awning over the door.
“I do know there was a mistake. That is not good,” said Annapolis Mayor Ellen O. Moyer.
Annapolis police spokesman Hal Dalton said a preliminary investigation indicated that a woman tried to barricade the apartment door. Police forced it open and threw in the small grenade designed to startle occupants.
Police apologize
The police quickly realized their error, apologized and left. They called for an ambulance for the woman, who said she felt ill.
Bernal was taken by ambulance to a hospital. She was released later.
Police then went to the apartment listed on the search warrant, where nobody was home and no illegal substances were found, Dalton said.
Schumaker and Carroll McCabe, an attorney who met with the family yesterday, said the couple gave the following account:
Bernal, 30, who said she has a heart problem, was handcuffed, and then placed on the floor before being taken to the hospital. Elmer Perez was kicked in the groin and handcuffed.
During the raid, a couple who share the apartment with Bernal and Perez returned home from grocery shopping and were prevented from entering the apartment.
The woman returning home told police that she was pregnant and the officer replied that he did not care. (Dalton said he could not verify that and that officers are “trained and encouraged to act professional at all times.”)
Police who burst into the apartment wore full-face masks and did not identify themselves, the two couples told the lawyer. Officers damaged the couples’ personal belongings, including a bed, as they conducted a search that turned up nothing. When police realized their mistake, they asked a resident to sign a piece of paper, but she refused, McCabe said.
The two female occupants said they and Perez were examined at a hospital, but Dalton said he could not confirm that.
Dalton said that in the 15 or so times such mistakes have been made over about three decades, the city has compensated the victims.
The department did not apologize to the couples whose apartment was raided Wednesday, he said.
He said did not know what disciplinary action might be taken against the officers.
Dalton estimated that 12 to 15 officers were involved and that he did know whether any Spanish-speaking officers took part. He said the vice and narcotics unit prepared the warrant and that the Annapolis Special Emergency Team executed it.
‘Factually correct’
“The warrant was factually correct,” he said. It was part of a continuing investigation, he said.
The department’s Hispanic liaison spoke with the couples, Dalton said. As the department reviews its policies and procedures, it will seek input from the Hispanic community, he said.
A resident of the building where the apartment was erroneously raided said yesterday that she was scared when, while she smoked a cigarette on her balcony, police surrounded the building and told everyone to go inside.
“If my kid had been outside playing … ” Rebecca Goss said.
Schumaker contacted McCabe, who said her goal was to protect the couples’ interests.
Yesterday, the manager of Five Guys restaurant, where Bernal and the other female occupant work, delivered dinner and flowers as the couples talked to McCabe.
The battered apartment door stood against a trash bin and across from the couples’ unit, a new door in its place.
Posted By:
huffgas
WILLINGBORO, NJ
A student at a school for children with emotional or behavioral disorders was shot by a township police officer Thursday after the child allegedly threatened the officer with scissors, authorities from the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office announced.
The juvenile, whose identity was not released, was shot once in the chest and once in the abdomen, and was in critical but stable condition Thursday night at a Camden hospital, authorities said.
The circumstances of the incident remain under investigation, but authorities said township police received several 911 calls about 3:55 p.m. Thursday reporting there was a male student “out of control” and armed with scissors at Garfield Park Academy, a private K-12 school for students with special needs on Glenolden Lane.
The 911 callers said the student was in the school office allegedly threatening staff with scissors. When officers arrived, the student was outside the school armed with two pairs of scissors, authorities said.
“Officers approached the student and began to attempt a dialogue with him. The student was ordered numerous times to drop the scissors and failed to comply with the officers’ commands. The student continued to act in an aggressive manner and his actions toward one of the officers resulted in the officer firing two rounds from his service weapon,” a news release from the prosecutor’s office read.
The student was flown by medical helicopter to Cooper Hospital-University Medical Center in Camden.
The officer who shot the boy was identified as Sgt. William Smith, a 19-year veteran of the Willingboro police force. Authorities said he has been placed on administrative leave while the incident is investigated.
Posted By:
huffgas