Police Shootings / Possible Abuse Threads [merged] (3 Viewers)

A collective of national and local news organizations filed a federal lawsuit after a Louisiana law that bans taking photos or videos of police officers from less than 25 feet away took effect on Thursday.

New Orleans nonprofit paper Verite News, as well as national media players Gannett, Gray, Nexstar, Scripps and Tegna, were named as plaintiffs in the suit to stop the law, which punishes violators with a fine of up to $500 or up to 60 days in jail.

“The Act has grave implications for the ability of reporters and news organizations, including Plaintiffs, to exercise their First Amendment rights,” the suit, filed in the U.S. Middle District Court of Louisiana read, adding that it “grants law enforcement officers limitless, standardless discretion to prevent journalists from approaching near enough to document the way officers perform their duties in public places.”

The controversial law, signed by Republican Governor Jeff Landry in May, would shield officers from disruptive bystanders, police argue. But critics say these protections already exist, questioning why officers would feel threatened by filming alone.

"People need to feel like they can observe and record the state exercising its police power, whether that's on Bourbon Street or the side of the road," Scott Sternberg, a lawyer for the plaintiffs told the Times-Picayune. "There is so much subjectivity in this law, and it is so unbelievably vague."............

 
Children held in juvenile detention facilities in Texas were pepper-sprayed in the face to the point of vomiting, held in solitary confinement for weeks, and sexually abused by staff members, according to shocking new findings from a Department of Justice investigation.

The feds’ report, published on Thursday, found that five Texas facilities engaged in abuse, discrimination and violated the constitutional rights of minors, following a four-year investigation, which also determined that children were subject to excessive force and failed to receive proper mental health treatment…….

 
A New York City judge has thrown out 46 convictions tied to James Donovan, a former New York Police Department detective who later pleaded guilty to false testimony.

“The fundamental fairness and reliability of each of these convictions has been called into question,” Bryce Benjet, director of Queens District Attorney’s Office Conviction Integrity Unit said in court on Thursday, according to Gothamist.

The convictions, which included drug possession, trespassing, and other misdemeanors, will be cleared from the records of those who were arrested, and whose sentences have all been completed.


“We cannot stand behind a conviction where the essential witness was a law enforcement officer convicted of a crime that irreparably impaired his credibility,” Queens DA Melinda Katz said in a statement heading into the hearing.

Former NYPD Warrant Squad Detective James Donovan pleaded guilty in 2023 to perjury in the third degree. He retired that year.……

 
A New York City judge has thrown out 46 convictions tied to James Donovan, a former New York Police Department detective who later pleaded guilty to false testimony.

“The fundamental fairness and reliability of each of these convictions has been called into question,” Bryce Benjet, director of Queens District Attorney’s Office Conviction Integrity Unit said in court on Thursday, according to Gothamist.

The convictions, which included drug possession, trespassing, and other misdemeanors, will be cleared from the records of those who were arrested, and whose sentences have all been completed.


“We cannot stand behind a conviction where the essential witness was a law enforcement officer convicted of a crime that irreparably impaired his credibility,” Queens DA Melinda Katz said in a statement heading into the hearing.

Former NYPD Warrant Squad Detective James Donovan pleaded guilty in 2023 to perjury in the third degree. He retired that year.……

Of course he retired.

If that were you or me we'd have gotten 7 years in San Quentin.
 
A Georgia man who was killed by police inside a Cobb County Walgreens had his hands up, according to friends and family.

Nathain Jenkins, 32, of Valdosta, was shot in a Walgreens store late Friday night, according to the Cobb County police.

“I was on the phone with him. He FaceTimed me. He put me in his pocket,” friend Hayley Glaze told local news station 11 Alive. “Basically, the police had him cornered. They were yelling at him. He was yelling back my hands are up.

“This is uncalled for, especially if his hands were up. He stated his hands were up, and y’all still shot him," Glaze added. "There’s no way he could’ve reached for anything. He’s not like that. He’s not dumb.”…..

 
A Georgia man who was killed by police inside a Cobb County Walgreens had his hands up, according to friends and family.

Nathain Jenkins, 32, of Valdosta, was shot in a Walgreens store late Friday night, according to the Cobb County police.

“I was on the phone with him. He FaceTimed me. He put me in his pocket,” friend Hayley Glaze told local news station 11 Alive. “Basically, the police had him cornered. They were yelling at him. He was yelling back my hands are up.

“This is uncalled for, especially if his hands were up. He stated his hands were up, and y’all still shot him," Glaze added. "There’s no way he could’ve reached for anything. He’s not like that. He’s not dumb.”…..

i guess there is a reason why video hasn't been released. i have no doubt Walgreens has it on video.
In a situation like this, do the investigators seize the footage or does Walgreens get to keep it?
 

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