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"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”

Fairfax Cop arrested with child porn makes bail


Fairfax County cop arrested on child porn charges


This thug needed an arrest so bad he could smell it.


Fairfax County Punk in action


Fairfax County Punk makes up the law as he goes along and gets away with it


Comments from You Tube
Bunny Boots Ink 1 month ago
What that cop did was very illegal and you should seek civil action against him.  You have a very easy case against that officer because he violated your rights.  I'm forwarding this video to PINAC (Photography Is Not A Crime).  This needs public attention.
catrashoo 1 month ago
Its about privacy ,when the officer gave his statement about the arrest ,the 1rst charge he mension  was about the ID THING , he was told that they were not going to charge me for that because the law had changed back in 2013 ,and at the end of the video he says why he was arresting me ,its all about privacy ,he invaded my house ,my sanctuary . I know they are doing this to others who dont know the law.

Ian Battles 1 month ago
And cops wonder why nobody respects them!

Nonya Bidnass 1 month ago
+Ian Battles No they don't. They know why, they just don't care.

Aaron Hypnotoad 1 month ago (edited)
Fairfax, and Virginia itself, does not have any Stop & ID statutes on the books. There is no law that requires you to hand over a physical ID upon request or demand of an officer while in your own home. The most he could lawfully get you on is if he was going to issue a citation and you refused top identify (which you can do verbally) to allow him to fill out the citation. But nothing requires you to hand over an actual ID. He was completely in the wrong for arresting you for saying you were not going to hand over an ID. Since this happened a couple months ago, what was the outcome? Did they charge you with anything?

Atanas Tripzter 1 month ago
No worries if anything happens to him he'll get 2 weeks of paid suspension.. paid by the person he assaulted .

David Scott 1 month ago
Criminal thugs being criminal thugs.

carib2703 3 weeks ago
Is there a Federal, State or Local Ordinance which places a duty and obligation for a man or woman to take a govt issued document called a birth certificate, travel to a Govt office, pick up a pen and write on a form called an application, then pay a sum of money for a Govt issued ID or else face fines or imprisonment? If there is such a Law, Statue or Code in any of the 50 States then a person MUST show ID when asked by the police. But since no freaking law exist anywhere in the 50 state, how can anyone be required or obligated to provided something they have no legal obligation to get or posses in the first place? Same goes for a name and DOB? Any written law anywhere saying a child or parent MUST provide one or else face fines or imprisonment? Wake up people!

Gregory gullace jr 1 month ago (Fairfax County Police)
your fucking corrupt piece of shit motherfuckers you fucking pussy motherfuckerss

David Welch 1 month ago

These cops should have their heads on spikes. It's effective to keep invaders out. 

These fellows qualify for the Two Year Torres Vacation Plan!

          
 Holy Gosh! How can I qualify for the Two Year Torres Vacation Plan?

It’s easy! Join your nearest police force and shoot someone to death

 BUT REMEMBER THE SECRET PASSWORD…    “I thought he was reaching for a gun!”


How the Oakland Police Woke a Man to Kill Him.

Still, it happened in Oakland, CA, and a member of the Oakland Police Department pulled the trigger. That is worthy of note, as OPD is still, after eleven years, under a Federal Monitor and a Federal Judge for both egregious acts of criminality and racism and just as blatant and violent civil rights violations.

In the early morning hours of June 7th, 2015, for reasons still unknown, a car with a lone driver and no passengers pulled to the side of the I 580 westbound Lake Merritt exit ramp. And the driver fell asleep - or became otherwise unconscious. The Fire Department was tasked to investigate; upon doing so, and noticing that a gun was visible on the passenger seat, they called in the Oakland Police.

The police first tried to wake the man using a loudspeaker or bullhorn, to no avail. Their next tactic was to fire bean-bag rounds at the windows of the BMW. That did not roust the man either. Then one or more officers approached the passenger side and smashed in that window with a metal rod. This may or may not have begun to wake the man up, the details are unclear.

What is clear is that some minutes later the same or another group of officers approached the vehicle and the man had become, or was becoming conscious. One officer shot him with a taser and at approximately the same time another shot him with her service revolver. The lawyer for the officer who fired the live ammunition has claimed that his client saw him making a motion with his arm towards the gun on the passenger seat, so she fired, fearing for her life.

He was then taken to the county hospital and pronounced dead.

His name was Demouria Hogg. He had three children.

BROUGHT TO YOU BY................................

THE TORRES TWO YEAR VACATION PLAN....

ITS JUST LIKE GETTING AWAY WITH MURDER


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A London lawyer runs a stop sign and gets pulled over by an Irish Garda.


A London lawyer runs a stop sign and gets pulled over by an Irish Garda.
He thinks that he is smarter than the cop because he is a lawyer, from London , and is certain that he has a better education than any Paddy cop.
He decides to prove this to himself and have some fun at the Garda's expense!
Irish Garda says,' License and registration, please.'
London Lawyer says, 'What for?'
Irish Garda replies, 'You didn't come to a complete stop at the Stop sign.'
London Lawyer says, 'I slowed down, and no one was coming.'
Irish Garda says, 'You still didn't come to a complete stop.
License And registration, please.'
London Lawyer says, 'What's the difference?'
Irish Garda says, 'The difference is, you have to come to complete stop, that's the law. License and registration, please!'
London Lawyer says, 'If you can show me the legal difference between 'slow down' and 'stop', I'll give you my license and registration and you give me the ticket. If not, you let me go and don't give me the ticket.'
Irish Garda says, 'Sounds fair. Exit your vehicle, sir.'

The London lawyer exits his vehicle. The Irish Garda takes out his baton and starts beating the fuck out of the lawyer with it and says, 'Do you want me to stop, or just slow down?'

THESE COMPANIES SPONSOR THE POLICE GAME...THANK FOR NOTHING 















Police officer’s child pornography case pushed to September


Longtime PIO ‘held visible position of public trust’

by Gregg MacDonald

The child pornography case of a 15-year veteran and public spokesman for the Fairfax County Police Department has been continued until Sept. 8.
On June 17 before Fairfax County District Judge Thomas Gallahue, PFC and former public information officer William “Bud” Walker, 50, entered the courtroom dressed in a dark suit and sat quietly as his attorney, Ed Nuttall, asked for and was granted a continuance of the case until September. Nuttall declined to comment on the case.
Detectives in the Major Crimes Division’s Child Exploitation Unit arrested Walker on April 15, at police headquarters. Police said detectives were contacted by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children last July and were provided a CyberTip, originally received through photo networking site Tumblr. The tip alleged that child pornography had been uploaded through Tumblr’s servers and police later determined that the location of the upload came from a residence within Fairfax County.
Detectives began their investigation on April 6, and on April 8, determined the residence was owned by Walker. He was relieved of duty on April 9 and was charged on April 15 with two counts of possession of child pornography.
Walker was originally hired by the agency in December 1999. He worked in a patrol capacity at the West Springfield District Station until 2004. He then took a position in the Public Information Office until 2006. Walker returned to patrol at the West Springfield District Station in March 2006 before being assigned to South County High School as a School Resource Officer, where he worked from November 2006 until August 2009. He returned to the Public Information Office, where he worked until being relieved of duty on April 9.
Walker has posted a $15,000 bond and currently remains on paid administrative leave, according to police.
In April, Fairfax County General District Court Judge Richard E. Gardiner ordered Walker not to use computers and to not have any unsupervised contact with minors until his case is concluded.
Colonel Edwin C. Roessler Jr., Fairfax County chief of police, said that based on the fact that Walker held a visible position of public trust, Roessler felt it was imperative to place the safety of the public at the forefront of the investigation and was appreciative of the diligent work of the numerous detectives assigned to the case.

gmacdonald@fairfaxtimes.com



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Did Performance Measurement Cause America's Police Problem?



Some argue it can be traced back to how departments evaluate their officers.
BY KATHERINE BARRETT & RICHARD GREENE |

You’ve doubtless heard the maxim “what gets measured, gets managed.” Sometimes it’s attributed to management guru Peter Drucker, though others also get credit for it. But whoever actually coined the phrase, we remember the first time we became aware of it, about a quarter of a century ago.
It seemed like a purely positive sentiment to us back in the days when we naively believed that performance measurement could cure most governmental ills. If gathering data about inputs, outputs and outcomes could solve all management problems, then cities and states had access to a golden key to a more effective and efficient future. Then reality intervened and we recognized that even good measurements don’t necessarily result in the right policy or practice changes.
But, somewhat more ominously, we’ve become aware of a troubling question that lurks in the field of performance measurement: What happens if we’re not measuring the right things in the first place? If Drucker -- or whoever -- was right, doesn’t that mean that we may manage government programs in a way that leads to more problems? Sometimes, for example, states and localities focus their measurements on the speed with which a service is delivered. Faster always seems better. But often delivering a service quickly means doing so less effectively.
For fire departments, response times are a commonly used measure of service quality.  But "the requirement for low response times may incentivize firefighters to drive fast," said Amy Donahue, professor and vice-provost for academic operations at the University of Connecticut. "And it has been shown that while speeding saves very little in terms of total driving time, it is much more dangerous -- both to those in the emergency vehicle and other innocents who might get in their way. The potential for accidents is high, and when they happen, the consequences can be very tragic."
As the field has become aware of these dangers, many agencies are trying to mitigate them by improving education, prohibiting responders from exceeding speed limits, and requiring responders to participate in emergency vehicle operators programs.
Examples like this one are everywhere. But we just came across something in the March 2015 edition of New Perspectives in Policing that had never occurred to us before and that seems to be widely ignored by public safety organizations around the country. It was written by Malcolm K. Sparrow, professor of practice of public management at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
As violent incidents in several of America’s cities show the underlying tensions between police and the public they serve, Sparrow argues that some of this dissonance has actually been encouraged by the fact that most police departments are pushed to measure crime clearance and enforcement. These are important factors, but they have little to do with community satisfaction. Meanwhile, he points out that “a few departments now use citizen satisfaction surveys on a regular basis, but most do not.”
The measures currently used do little to demonstrate the success of police departments in detecting problems at an early stage and preventing them from becoming harmful to a community’s well-being. As he writes, success at these critical goals “would not produce substantial year-to-year reductions in crime figures because genuine and substantial reductions are available only when crime problems have first grown out of control.”
Sparrow points out that the two most commonly used measures of police work -- crime reduction and enforcement productivity “fail to reflect the very best performance in crime control.”
Clearly superior performance in crime control results from the citizens’ sense that the police are on their side and use force in a fair and effective way. But the commonly used measures don’t get to any of these things. As a result, according to a comment from the commissioner of the New South Wales Police Force in Australia, quoted by Sparrow: Sticking to the usual measures is unhealthy if it “causes police on the streets to set aside sound judgment and the public good in the pursuit of arrest quotas, lest they attract management criticism or compromise their chances of promotion.”


Katherine Barrett & Richard Greene   

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We don’t need police. Here’s how we can do without them.


By Joël Valenzuela on January 2, 2014

The cops are out of control. So much so that some of us are dreaming of a post-police world. Well, there’s no more need to dream. Wake up. It’s happening right before our eyes. And it’s about time. The police have gotten so far away from their purported role of protecting the people that more often than not they have ended up doing the exact opposite.
The tragic case of Marlene Tapia provides a perfect deconstruction of everything that’s wrong with today’s police state. First, Tapia was detained on suspicion of possessing narcotics. Never mind that she wasn’t hurting anyone, or that said narcotics were intended to make her, or someone someone else, happy, even if only temporarily. The officer involved was protecting or helping absolutely no one. Next, Tapia was strip-searched, a gross and forceful violation of her privacy and person. Again, such a procedure protects no one and only comes into play because of the aforementioned substance restriction. Finally, upon noticing evidence of a concealed substance protruding from Tapia’s body, the officer sprayed her genitals with mace, serving absolutely no purpose other than to cause her pain and humiliation.
What’s the worst part of this story? That everything the officer did except for the macing was standard procedure? That the officer had been “disciplined” for her torturous action, yet remained on staff? Or that millions of us involuntarily pay for an armed force to visit violence and aggression upon us?
How can we get the police to start working for us again? By making them private. Now I know you’re thinking this is just another libertarian fantasy. It isn’t. It’s real. And where is it happening? In the land of government failure: Detroit.

Yes, we’re talking about private citizens picking up the slack left by police incompetence. But we’re also talking about something even better: the Threat Management Center. This Detroit-based business has effectively filled the protection void left by law enforcement. But it gets even better. The Threat Management Center’s sole priorities are the protection of the people under their charge. They have specific incentives to focus exclusively on safety, and find non-violent ways of defusing tense situations before resorting to force. Since they’re privately funded, they have a direct incentive to make their customers happy. Any form of misconduct can instantly result in a loss of funding.

Fmr. Fairfax Co officer child porn case continued



Booking photo of Ofc William “Bud” Walker(Photo: Fairfax County Police)

FAIRFAX, Va. (WUSA9) -- A former Fairfax County Police Department spokesperson's child pornography case has been continued until September 8, WUSA9's Peggy Fox reported Wednesday.
William "Bud" Walker, a well-known, 15-year member of the department was scheduled to appear in court Wednesday afternoon.

Walker was relieved of his duties back in April after being charged with two counts of possession of child pornography, according to officials.

These companies are sponsoring the cop games sponsored by the Fairfax County Police





Cop Shooting into a Car Full of Unarmed Teens and….. surprise surprise…. gets away with it



Chicago, IL — A deeply troubling police dash cam video has been kept from the public by the city of Chicago which showed CPD officer Marco Proano, fire into a car occupied by six unarmed teenagers. Police did not want the public to see this video.
City lawyers successfully convinced a federal judge to put the video under the protective order, which prevented parties to the lawsuit from releasing it publicly. However, after watching the video, Retired Cook County Judge Andrew Berman was so disturbed that he leaked it to The Chicago Reporter. Neither Berman nor the Reporter are subject to the order.
“I’ve seen lots of gruesome, grisly crimes,” said. Berman. “But this is disturbing on a whole different level.”
In March, the teens won a federal lawsuit against the city and three police officers, using the video as the center of their case. The city has yet to pay out the $360,000.
According to The Chicago Reporter, The city’s Independent Police Review Authority, known as IPRA, has not completed its investigation of the incident 18 months later. FBI officials would neither confirm nor deny a Chicago Sun-Times report that the agency is investigating the shooting.
In the video, Proano shoots into a moving car of six unarmed teenagers. Two of the teenagers were shot – one in the shoulder and the other in the left hip and right heel, according to court documents.
CPD’s policy prohibits officers from firing at moving vehicles that are not a threat. The teens in the car posed zero threat to the Proano, who jumped out of his cruiser and immediately unloaded his weapon into multiple unarmed teenagers.
After the shooting police discovered that the car was stolen. However, the teen was found not guilty after the prosecutors were unable to prove he knew the car was stolen. Even if they had stolen this vehicle, the actions by OfficerProano would not have been justified.
Proano has yet to face even a slap on the wrist. He was never disciplined and remains an active member of the Chicago Police Department

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