on sale now at amazon

on sale now at amazon
"I don't like this book because it don't got know pictures" Chief Rhorerer

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

Officers accused of excessive force face hearing





Maranda Faris,

Three Mt. Juliet police officers who are accused of using excessive force against four apartment residents in June face a settlement hearing Friday in U.S. Magistrate Court.
The four are among 30 residents who also allege racial discrimination by police, the city of Mt. Juliet and apartment management.
The lawsuit alleges that the three officers arrived in response to a disturbance at an apartment complex on June 10.
They arrested three teens and the mother of one of them, used pepper spray on the crowd and threatened to use a stun gun.
According to the complaint, Officer Matt Mang arrived at Willow Creek Apartments in Mt. Juliet and asked the three teens — Kari Banks, Kenneth Clemmons and De'Ontre Nealous — to turn down the music on an iPhone.
Banks then began to argue with the officer, according to the complaint. Mang handcuffed Banks and is accused of grabbing him by the hair and shoving him into the side of his patrol car. Clemmons and Nealous were recording video of the incident on their phones.
A group formed around the officer as Banks' mother, Kitakiamma Banks, arrived and questioned why her son was handcuffed. She became upset, was thrown to the ground and handcuffed, and suffered a seizure. She was taken by ambulance to the hospital, where she was ultimately arrested and charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.
Clemmons faced the same charges, while Kari Banks was charged with resisting arrest and unruly behavior. Nealous was charged with disorderly conduct and assault.
Other officers arrived to assist Mang with crowd control. Two of those officers are accused of threatening to pepper spray the crowd around them and hitting Nealous and Clemmons with police batons.
The complaint identifies those two officers by last name only — Toy and Short — and the city of Mt. Juliet and the police department refuse to identify them further.
The racial discrimination part of the lawsuit stems from the actions taken by apartment management and police. Three residents were evicted from their apartments, and the managers, Cheri Hass and Trina Gonzalez, subsequently requested permission from the ownership — Woodland Arms Apartments and Concord Management Limited — to have Mt. Juliet police guard the complex. Hass, Gonzales and the two owners also are defendants in the case.
The plaintiffs say their movements were restricted by police security and that they were kept from entering common areas of the complex after dark while white residents were not.
They also argue that all arrests, restrictions and evictions occurred only to African-American residents due to their race, not misbehavior on the residents' part.
The three officers involved are still employed by the Mt. Juliet police department.
City Manager Kenneth Martin said that it would "not be proper" to comment on the case because litigation is pending.

Maranda Faris



John Geer