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PostPosted: 03/03/15 3:22 pm • # 1 
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Eric Holder's tenure winds down with a BIG and important win ~ :st ~ I'm also disappointed but not surprised at the FBI investigation news ~ "civil rights charges" are very difficult and narrow charges to prove ~ Sooz

DOJ Finds Pervasive Racial Bias at Ferguson Police Department
—By Inae Oh | Tue Mar. 3, 2015 3:10 PM EST

The Department of Justice has concluded that the Ferguson Police Department engaged in racially biased practices, including disproportionately arresting African-Americans during routine traffic stops. The findings are the result of an investigation launched back in September, which found that systematic biased behavior, including "racist jokes about blacks" on police email accounts, have resulted in fractured race relations in the Missouri community and a deep mistrust of police officials. From the Times:

Quote:
In compiling the report, federal investigators conducted hundreds of interviews, reviewed 35,000 pages of police records and analyzed race data compiled for every police stop. They concluded that, over the past two years, African-Americans made up about two-thirds of the city’s population but accounted for 85 percent of traffic stops, 90 percent of citations, 93 percent of arrests and 88 percent of cases in which the police used force.

The full report is expected to be released on Wednesday.

The findings are separate from an FBI investigation focused on Darren Wilson, the police officer who fatally shot unarmed 18-year-old Michael Brown last August. According to previous reports, the Justice Department is planning to clear Wilson of civil rights charges.

Brown's shooting death and a Ferguson grand jury's decision not to indict Wilson sparked a national debate on police brutality and racist police practices.

http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2015/03/justice-department-ferguson-police


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PostPosted: 03/04/15 8:46 am • # 2 
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Here's more information ~ there is a video [accessible via the end link] that is at the top of this commentary ~ Sooz

Justice Department releases scathing Ferguson report
03/03/15 02:29 PM—Updated 03/03/15 09:17 PM
By Trymaine Lee

The Justice Department on Tuesday released a scathing report, saying the Ferguson, Missouri police department engaged in a broad pattern of conduct that routinely violated the constitutional rights of African-Americans.

The DOJ findings include the following: (1) a pattern and practice of disproportionate stops and arrests of blacks without probable cause, (2) unreasonable force, (3) racially biased handling of warrants by municipal courts, and (4) a pattern of focusing on revenue over public safety that violated the rights of poor, black residents.

As part of the investigation, federal investigators also uncovered email evidence of further racial bias and stereotyping by both members of the Ferguson police department and municipal court officials. The email evidence includes racist jokes, one that referenced President Barack Obama and another that referred to a refund a black woman received for an abortion as a credit from “Crimestoppers.”

“And while blacks were more than twice as likely as whites to be stopped while driving, they were 26% less likely to be found with illegal contraband.”

The report comes six months after a white Ferguson police officer shot and killed unarmed black teenager Michael Brown Jr., an incident that drew widespread scrutiny and brought national attention to the long history of abuses allegedly committed by the city’s overwhelmingly white police force against its majority black population.

Shortly after Brown’s killing by former Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, the Justice Department announced parallel investigations into both the incident itself and the entire Ferguson police department.

A grand jury in November declined to indict Wilson. He resigned from the police department shortly thereafter.

While there has been little expectation that the Justice Department would file federal civil rights charges against Wilson – the bar for such charges is set extremely high – a finding that the police department engaged in some form of racially biased policing seemed more likely.

African-Americans make up nearly 70% of the city’s population but only about 3% of Ferguson’s police department. Residents have alleged physical abuse, unfair and random stops and searches. In 2013, the state’s attorney general found that black motorists were twice as likely as white drivers to be stopped by police, despite being less likely to be carrying contraband.

In 88% of documented incidents in which police used force against someone, that person was black. In each of the 14 cases involving someone being bitten by a police dog, that person was black.

And the poor treatment didn’t end on the street. Blacks in Ferguson were 68% less likely than others to have their cases dismissed by the municipal judge and were disproportionately likely to have a warrant issued against them, according to the report. As recently as 2013, 96% of those arrested on outstanding warrants were black.

But even more than the treatment they received once stopped, the Justice Department’s report found that blacks were used in the criminal justice system to buoy the city’s economy and balance its budget. The practices uncovered by federal investigators have violated residents’ constitutional rights to due process and equal protection under the law.

The DOJ’s report found that blacks were also subject to unfair stops and arrest for minor offenses like “manner of walking” in a roadway.

Since 2010, the local court has collected more revenue for “failure to appear in court” charges than any other charge, according to the report. The court collected $442,901 in fines for such violations, accounting for nearly 25% of total court revenue that year.

The enormity of the net cast by law enforcement and court officials upon the city’s black community is staggering. As of late 2014, more than 16,000 Ferguson residents – out of a population of 21,000 – had outstanding warrants issued by the city’s municipal courts. The vast majority of those warrants stem from cases involving minor violations such as parking infractions, traffic tickets, and housing code violations, according to the report.

These findings, long known by local activists, lawyers and many black residents, underscore the tainted relationship between blacks and police. Many have pointed to the fact that initial reports claimed Officer Wilson stopped Brown and a friend for little more than walking down the center of the street.

http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/justice-department-releases-scathing-ferguson-report


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PostPosted: 03/04/15 8:58 am • # 3 
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This is the mindset that percolates across the US ~ since any repercussions will be against the "deep pockets" entity [for example the city/town] and not the individual, I'm thinking nothing will change ~ :g ~ Sooz

Ferguson Official Stated President Obama Wouldn't Last Long "Because What Black Man Holds a Steady Job for Four Years”
More details emerge from the Justice Department's investigation into Ferguson.
—By Jaeah Lee | Tue Mar. 3, 2015 9:15 PM EST

New details have emerged about the Justice Department's forthcoming report finding patterns of racial discrimination among officials and police officers in Ferguson, Missouri. Among the findings is an email saying that Barack Obama wouldn't last long as president because he's black and data showing that for years, traffic stops, use of force, petty crime charges, and affronts by police canines disproportionately targeted the city's black residents.

Here are more findings as reported by the Associated Press's Eric Tucker and PBS NewsHour:

◾Ferguson's black drivers were more than twice as likely as their white counterparts to be stopped and searched, according to records over two years. Black drivers were also 26 percent less likely to be found in possession of contraband.
◾According to the police department's internal records concerning force, 88 percent of those cases involved force against blacks. All 14 canine bite incidents involved blacks.
◾Blacks were 68 percent less likely than others to have their cases dismissed in municipal court. An arrest warrant was more likely to be issued for blacks.
◾The Justice Department found that the court uses petty crime charges to pad the city's budget. As of December 2014, 16,000 out of Ferguson's 21,000 residents have outstanding warrants for minor violations, including traffic tickets.
◾A 2008 message in a municipal email account stated that President Barack Obama would not be president for very long because "what black man holds a steady job for four years."
◾Over a six-month period in 2014, 95 percent of inmates who spent more than two days in the Ferguson jail were black.
◾Petty offenses disproportionately target black citizens. 95 percent of all "Manner of Walking in Roadway" charges were against blacks.

The DOJ's full report is expected as early as Wednesday.

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/03/here-are-more-details-about-dojs-investigation-ferguson


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PostPosted: 03/04/15 9:40 am • # 4 
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When a police force does lynchings it's pretty clear that there's a wee bias.


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PostPosted: 03/04/15 10:13 am • # 5 
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oskar576 wrote:
When a police force does lynchings it's pretty clear that there's a wee bias.

Only to those of us with working brain cells, oskar ~ :g

Sooz


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PostPosted: 03/04/15 11:26 am • # 6 
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sooz06 wrote:
oskar576 wrote:
When a police force does lynchings it's pretty clear that there's a wee bias.

Only to those of us with working brain cells, oskar ~ :g

Sooz


"They" are as aware of it as we are. They merely enjoy the power it gives them.


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PostPosted: 03/05/15 9:11 am • # 7 
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Breathtakingly craven ~ I read somewhere yesterday that 1 Ferguson "official" had been fired and 2 more were "under investigation" ~ I'm guessing that only scratches the surface ~ :g ~ Sooz

15 most outrageous examples of police misconduct in the DOJ report on Ferguson
Newsweek | 04 Mar 2015 at 18:57 ET | March 4, 2015
Taylor Wofford

The Department of Justice today released a report of its investigation into claims of civil rights abuses by police officers in Ferguson, Missouri, where Darren Wilson, a white officer, shot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old, over the summer.

The report paints a police department and municipal court system driven by revenue rather than "public safety needs" and engaged in "a pattern or practice of unlawful conduct….that violates the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and federal statutory law."

Here are the 15 most egregious examples of misconduct by police and court officers:

A woman's parking ticket, which began as a $151 fine (plus fees), ballooned to more than $1,000 after she failed to appear in court several times:

Quote:
We spoke, for example, with an African-American woman who has a still-pending case stemming from 2007, when, on a single occasion, she parked her car illegally. She received two citations and a $151 fine, plus fees. The woman, who experienced financial difficulties and periods of homelessness over several years, was charged with seven Failure to Appear offenses for missing court dates or fine payments on her parking tickets between 2007 and 2010. For each Failure to Appear, the court issued an arrest warrant and imposed new fines and fees. From 2007 to 2014, the woman was arrested twice, spent six days in jail, and paid $550 to the court for the events stemming from this single instance of illegal parking. Court records show that she twice attempted to make partial payments of $25 and $50, but the court returned those payments, refusing to accept anything less than payment in full. One of those payments was later accepted, but only after the court’s letter rejecting payment by money order was returned as undeliverable. This woman is now making regular payments on the fine. As of December 2014, over seven years later, despite initially owing a $151 fine and having already paid $550, she still owed $541.

The DOJ alleges Ferguson police frequently dispensed with justice, instead policing with the goal of generating profit for the municipality through fines and fees. For example, they enacted a "traffic enforcement initiative" with the sole stated goal of generating revenue:

Quote:
In an April 2014 communication from the Finance Director to Chief Jackson and the City Manager, the Finance Director recommended immediate implementation of an “I-270 traffic enforcement initiative” in order to “begin to fill the revenue pipeline.” The Finance Director’s email attached a computation of the net revenues that would be generated by the initiative, which required paying five officers overtime for highway traffic enforcement for a four-hour shift. The Finance Director stated that “there is nothing to keep us from running this initiative 1,2,3,4,5,6, or even 7 days a week. Admittedly at 7 days per week[] we would see diminishing returns.” Indeed, in a separate email to FPD supervisors, the Patrol Captain explained that “[t]he plan behind this [initiative] is to PRODUCE traffic tickets, not provide easy OT.” There is no indication that anyone considered whether community policing and public safety would be better served by devoting five overtime officers to neighborhood policing instead of a “revenue pipeline” of highway traffic enforcement. Rather, the only downsides to the program that City officials appear to have considered are that “this initiative requires 60 to 90 [days] of lead time to turn citations into cash,” and that Missouri law caps the proportion of revenue that can come from municipal fines at 30%, which limits the extent to which the program can be used. See Mo. Rev. Stat. § 302.341.2. With regard to the statewide-cap issue, the Finance Director advised: “As the RLCs [Red Light Cameras] net revenues ramp up to whatever we believe its annualized rate will be, then we can figure out how to balance the two programs to get their total revenues as close as possible to the statutory limit of 30%.”

The city council voted to keep a municipal judge after one council member said, "[the judge] does not listen to the testimony, does not review the reports or the criminal history of defendants, and doesn’t let all the pertinent witnesses testify before rendering a verdict" because "the city cannot afford to lose any efficiency in our Courts, nor experience any decrease in our Fines and Forfeitures."

Quote:
The City has been aware for years of concerns about the impact its focus on revenue has had on lawful police action and the fair administration of justice in Ferguson. It has disregarded those concerns—even concerns raised from within the City government—to avoid disturbing the court’s ability to optimize revenue generation. In 2012, a Ferguson City Councilmember wrote to other City officials in opposition to Judge Brockmeyer’s reappointment, stating that “[the Judge] does not listen to the testimony, does not review the reports or the criminal history of defendants, and doesn’t let all the pertinent witnesses testify before rendering a verdict.” The Councilmember then addressed the concern that “switching judges would/could lead to loss of revenue,” arguing that even if such a switch did “lead to a slight loss, I think it’s more important that cases are being handled properly and fairly.” The City Manager acknowledged mixed reviews of the Judge’s work but urged that the Judge be reappointed, noting that “[i]t goes without saying the City cannot afford to lose any efficiency in our Courts, nor experience any decrease in our Fines and Forfeitures.”

Ferguson police officers frequently fail to document arrests, the DOJ says:

Quote:
In Ferguson, officers will sometimes make an arrest without writing a report or even obtaining an incident number, and hundreds of reports can pile up for months without supervisors reviewing them. Officers’ uses of force frequently go unreported, and are reviewed only laxly when reviewed at all. As a result of these deficient practices, stops, arrests, and uses of force that violate the law or FPD policy are rarely detected We identified several elements to this pattern of misconduct.

Ferguson Police officers handcuffed and held a man without reasonable suspicion while looking for another man. The handcuffed man was never charged with a crime.

Quote:
For example, in July 2013 police encountered an African-American man in a parking lot while on their way to arrest someone else at an apartment building. Police knew that the encountered man was not the person they had come to arrest. Nonetheless, without even reasonable suspicion, they handcuffed the man, placed him in the back of a patrol car, and ran his record. It turned out he was the intended arrestee’s landlord. The landlord went on to help the police enter the person’s unit to effect the arrest, but he later filed a complaint alleging racial discrimination and unlawful detention. Ignoring the central fact that they had handcuffed a man and put him in a police car despite having no reason to believe he had done anything wrong, a sergeant vigorously defended FPD’s actions, characterizing the detention as “minimal” and pointing out that the car was air conditioned. Even temporary detention, however, constitutes a deprivation of liberty and must be justified under the Fourth Amendment. Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 809-10 (1996).

The DOJ claims Ferguson police officers often detain suspects without reasonable suspicion to run checks for warrants—a significant source of revenue for the municipality.

Quote:
At times, the constitutional violations are even more blatant. An African-American man recounted to us an experience he had while sitting at a bus stop near Canfield Drive. According to the man, an FPD patrol car abruptly pulled up in front of him. The officer inside, a patrol lieutenant, rolled down his window and addressed the man:

Lieutenant: Get over here.

Bus Patron: Me?

Lieutenant: Get the f*** over here. Yeah, you.

Bus Patron: Why? What did I do?

The lieutenant ran the man’s name for warrants. Finding none, he returned the ID and said, “get the hell out of my face.” These allegations are consistent with other, independent allegations of misconduct that we heard about this particular lieutenant, and reflect the routinely disrespectful treatment many African Americans say they have come to expect from Ferguson police. That a lieutenant with supervisory responsibilities allegedly engaged in this conduct is further cause for concern.

A Ferguson police officer jailed several young African-American men for disorderly conduct after he claimed to have smelled marijuana, despite the fact that an investigation of the car did not produce marijuana or any other contraband.

Quote:
As with its pattern of unconstitutional stops, FPD routinely makes arrests without probable cause. Frequently, officers arrest people for conduct that plainly does not meet the elements of the cited offense. For example, in November 2013, an officer approached five African-American young people listening to music in a car. Claiming to have smelled marijuana, the officer placed them under arrest for disorderly conduct based on their “gathering in a group for the purposes of committing illegal activity.” The young people were detained and charged—some taken to jail, others delivered to their parents—despite the officer finding no marijuana, even after conducting an inventory search of the car. Similarly, in February 2012, an officer wrote an arrest notification ticket for Peace Disturbance for “loud music” coming from a car. The arrest ticket appears unlawful as the officer did not assert, and there is no other indication, that a third party was disturbed by the music—an element of the offense. See Ferguson Mun. Code § 29-82 (prohibiting certain conduct that “unreasonably and knowingly disturbs or alarms another person or persons”). Nonetheless, a supervisor approved it. These warrantless arrests violated the Fourth Amendment because they were not based on probable cause. See Virginia v. Moore, 553 U.S. 164, 173 (2008).

A Ferguson police officer arrested a man for “refusing arrest.” The man had committed no other crime. He claims to have lost his job as a direct result of the arrest.

Quote:
For example, in the summer of 2012, an officer detained a 32-year-old African-American man who was sitting in his car cooling off after playing basketball. The officer arguably had grounds to stop and question the man, since his windows appeared more deeply tinted than permitted under Ferguson’s code. Without cause, the officer went on to accuse the man of being a pedophile, prohibit the man from using his cell phone, order the man out of his car for a pat-down despite having no reason to believe he was armed, and ask to search his car. When the man refused, citing his constitutional rights, the officer reportedly pointed a gun at his head, and arrested him. The officer charged the man with eight different counts, including making a false declaration for initially providing the short form of his first name (e.g., “Mike” instead of “Michael”) and an address that, although legitimate, differed from the one on his license. The officer also charged the man both with having an expired operator’s license, and with having no operator’s license in possession. The man told us he lost his job as a contractor with the federal government as a result of the charges.

Ferguson police set a police dog on an unarmed, fleeing man.

Quote:
In November 2013, an officer deployed a canine to bite and detain a fleeing subject even though the officer knew the suspect was unarmed. The officer deemed the subject, an African-American male who was walking down the street, suspicious because he appeared to walk away when he saw the officer. The officer stopped him and frisked him, finding no weapons. The officer then ran his name for warrants. When the man heard the dispatcher say over the police radio that he had outstanding warrants—the report does not specify whether the warrants were for failing to appear in municipal court or to pay owed fines, or something more serious—he ran. The officer followed him and released his dog, which bit the man on both arms. The officer’s supervisor found the force justified because the officer released the dog “fearing that the subject was armed,” even though the officer had already determined the man was unarmed.

An officer received a 30-day suspension after he was arrested for DUI and no punishment for instigating a bar fight.

Quote:
We found additional examples of FPD officers behaving in public in a manner that reflects poorly on FPD and law enforcement more generally. In November 2010, an officer was arrested for DUI by an Illinois police officer who found his car crashed in a ditch off the highway. Earlier that night he and his squad mates—including his sergeant—were thrown out of a bar for bullying a customer. The officer received a thirty-day suspension for the DUI. Neither the sergeant nor any officers was disciplined for their behavior in the bar. In September 2012, an officer stood by eating a sandwich while a fight broke out at an annual street festival. After finally getting involved to break up the fight, he publically [sic] berated and cursed at his squad mates, screamed and cursed at the two female street vendors who were fighting, and pepper-sprayed officer received a written reprimand.

Ferguson police Tasered a man who bit an EMT while having a diabetic seizure.

Quote:
In August 2011, officers used an ECW device against a man with diabetes who bit an EMT’s hand without breaking the skin. The man had been having seizures when he did not comply with officer commands.

The DOJ uncovered a trove of racist emails from city officials:

Quote:
We have discovered evidence of racial bias in emails sent by Ferguson officials, all of whom are current employees, almost without exception through their official City of Ferguson email accounts, and apparently sent during work hours. These email exchanges involved several police and court supervisors, including FPD supervisors and commanders. The following emails are illustrative:

• A November 2008 email stated that President Barack Obama would not be President for very long because “what black man holds a steady job for four years.”

• A March 2010 email mocked African Americans through speech and familial stereotypes, using a story involving child support. One line from the email read: “I be so glad that dis be my last child support payment! Month after month, year after year, all dose payments!”

• An April 2011 email depicted President Barack Obama as a chimpanzee.

• A May 2011 email stated: “An African-American woman in New Orleans was admitted into the hospital for a pregnancy termination. Two weeks later she received a check for $5,000. She phoned the hospital to ask who it was from. The hospital said, ‘Crimestoppers.’”

• A June 2011 email described a man seeking to obtain “welfare” for his dogs because they are “mixed in color, unemployed, lazy, can’t speak English and have no frigging clue who their Daddies are.”

• An October 2011 email included a photo of a bare-chested group of dancing women, apparently in Africa, with the caption, “Michelle Obama’s High School Reunion.”

• A December 2011 email included jokes that are based on offensive stereotypes about Muslims.

Our review of documents revealed many additional email communications that exhibited racial or ethnic bias, as well as other forms of bias. Our investigation has not revealed any indication that any officer or court clerk engaged in these communications was ever disciplined. Nor did we see a single instance in which a police or court recipient of such an email asked that the sender refrain from sending such emails, or any indication that these emails were reported as inappropriate. Instead, the emails were usually forwarded along to others.

Ferguson police arrested a man who was attempting to help his girlfriend, who had been injured in a car accident and was "bleeding profusely."

Quote:
We also reviewed many instances in which FPD officers arrested individuals who sought to care for loved ones who had been hurt. In one instance from May 2014, for example, a man rushed to the scene of a car accident involving his girlfriend, who was badly injured and bleeding profusely when he arrived. He approached and tried to calm her. When officers arrived they treated him rudely, according to the man, telling him to move away from his girlfriend, which he did not want to do. They then immediately proceeded to handcuff and arrest him, which, officers assert, he resisted. EMS and other officers were not on the scene during this arrest, so the accident victim remained unattended, bleeding from her injuries, while officers were arresting the boyfriend. Officers charged the man with five municipal code violations (Resisting Arrest, Disorderly Conduct, Assault on an Officer, Obstructing Government Operations, and Failure to Comply) and had his vehicle towed and impounded.

The DOJ alleges Ferguson police often failed to take allegations of misconduct seriously and in many cases did not even record them, contrary to clearly outlined regulations:

Quote:
FPD appears to intentionally not treat allegations of misconduct as complaints even where it believes that the officer in fact committed the misconduct. In one incident, for example, a supervisor wrote an email directly to an officer about a complaint the Police Chief had received about an officer speeding through the park in a neighboring town. The supervisor informed the officer that the Chief tracked the car number given by the complainant back to the officer, but assured the officer that the supervisor’s email was “[j]ust for your information. No need to reply and there is no record of this other than this email.” In another instance referenced above, the district manager of a retail store called a commander to tell him that he had a video recording that showed an FPD officer pull up to the store at about midnight while two employees were taking out the trash, take out his weapon, and put it on top of a concrete wall, pointed at the two employees. When the employees said they were just taking out the trash and asked the officer if he needed them to take off their coats so that he could see their uniforms, the officer told the employees that he knew they were employees and that if he had not known “I would have put you on the ground.” The commander related in an email to the sergeant and lieutenant that “there is no reason to doubt the Gen. Manager because he said he watched the video and he clearly saw a weapon—maybe the sidearm or the taser.” Nonetheless, despite noting that “we don’t need cowboy” and the “major concern” of the officer taking his weapon out of his holster and placing it on a wall, the commander concluded, “[n]othing for you to do with this other than make a mental note and for you to be on the lookout for that kind of behavior.”

Ferguson police officers who lied to investigators were not reprimanded in many cases:

Quote:
Our investigation raised concerns in particular about how FPD responds to untruthfulness by officers. In many departments, a finding of untruthfulness pursuant to internal investigation results in an officer’s termination because the officer’s credibility on police reports and in providing testimony is subsequently subject to challenge. In FPD, untruthfulness appears not even to always result in a formal investigation, and even where sustained, has little effect. In one case we reviewed, FPD sustained a charge of untruthfulness against an officer after he was found to have lied to the investigator about whether he had engaged in an argument with a civilian over the loudspeaker of his police vehicle. FPD imposed only a 12-hour suspension on the officer. In addition, FPD appears not to have taken the officer’s untruthfulness into sufficient account in several subsequent complaints, including in at least one case in which the complainant alleged conduct very similar to that alleged in the case in which FPD found the officer untruthful. Nor, as discussed above, has FPD or the City disclosed this information to defendants challenging charges brought by the officer. In another case a supervisor was sustained for false testimony during an internal affairs investigation and was given a written reprimand. In another case in which an officer was clearly untruthful, FPD did not sustain the charge in another jurisdiction was assigned to monitor an intersection in that city because an FPD-marked vehicle allegedly had repeatedly been running the stop sign at that intersection. While at that intersection, and while receiving a complaint from a person about the FPD vehicle, the officer saw that very vehicle “dr[iving] through the stop sign without tapping a brake,” according to a sergeant with the other jurisdiction. When asked to respond to these allegations, the officer wrote, unequivocally, “I assure you I don’t run stop signs.” It is clear from the investigative file that FPD found that he did, in fact, run stop signs, as the officer was given counseling. Nonetheless, the officer received a counseling memo that made no mention of the officer’s written denial of the misconduct observed by another law enforcement officer. This officer continues to write reports regarding significant uses of force, several of which our investigation found questionable.

You can read the report in its entirety below:

Ferguson Police Department Report

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2015/03/15-most-outrageous-examples-of-police-misconduct-in-the-doj-report-on-ferguson/


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PostPosted: 03/05/15 9:19 am • # 8 
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Rather damning.
And I'd wager that there are hundreds, maybe thousands, of equally corrupt forces.


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PostPosted: 03/06/15 5:15 pm • # 9 
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oskar576 wrote:
Rather damning.
And I'd wager that there are hundreds, maybe thousands, of equally corrupt forces.

Agreed, oskar ~ I'd love to see Eric Holder's last act before leaving office to be putting in place a nationwide federal review of ALL police/sheriff departments ~

Sooz


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PostPosted: 03/06/15 5:56 pm • # 10 
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The Repugnants would deny funding.


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PostPosted: 03/07/15 10:43 am • # 11 
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Obviously, the "pervasive racial bias" extends BEYOND the Ferguson PD ~ this "judge" is clearly a PoS ~ :g ~ Sooz

TPM LIVEWIRE
Ferguson Judge Who Imposed High Fines Owes Over $170K In Taxes
By Ahiza Garcia Published March 6, 2015, 4:34 PM EST

A Ferguson, Mo. judge accused of imposing high fines and harsh punishments on residents who couldn't afford to pay owes the US government more than $170,000 in back taxes, The Guardian newspaper reported on Friday.

Ronald J. Brockmeyer, 70, was identified in a scathing report issued by the Department of Justice on Tuesday that accused the city of racial biases in its justice system.

Brockmeyer allegedly fixed traffic tickets for himself and his friends while forcing others who came through his court to pay high fines, according to The Guardian. Those who were unable to pay were reportedly jailed by Brockmeyer, the newspaper reported.

The information about Brockmeyer came from tax filings which the paper got from Missouri officials.

The city of Ferguson is comprised of mostly white authorities, while its residents are two-thirds black, the paper reported. The DOJ's report was initiated after the police shooting of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown in August.

Brockmeyer reportedly was integral to enforcing the system wherein Ferguson used its court to increase revenue, a system that was found to have contributed to the city's strained race relations, according to the DOJ report. Brockmeyer allegedly created a variety of fees which, based on the DOJ's findings, "may be unlawful" and were "considered abusive."

Brockmeyer has served as a judge in Ferguson's municipal court for 12 years and also serves as a prosecutor in two cities in Missouri, a potential conflict of interest, according to legal experts who spoke to The Guardian.

The Guardian said it failed to get a response from Brockmeyer.

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/ronald-brockmeyer-ferguson-judge-taxes


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PostPosted: 03/07/15 12:15 pm • # 12 
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YIKES!!! ~ hopefully, Karma will release her bitchiness on this "judge" ~ he needs to be fired or impeached immediately ~ and, for dessert, sued over both his transgressions and his indiscretions ~ what a great example of a troglodyte ~ :g ~ Sooz

Ferguson judge who aggressively fined and jailed poor residents owes $170,000 in unpaid taxes
Jon Swaine, The Guardian / 06 Mar 2015 at 15:29 ET

The judge in Ferguson, Missouri, who is accused of fixing traffic tickets for himself and colleagues while inflicting a punishing regime of fines and fees on the city’s residents, also owes more than $170,000 in unpaid taxes.

Ronald J Brockmeyer, whose court allegedly jailed impoverished defendants unable to pay fines of a few hundred dollars, has a string of outstanding debts to the US government dating back to 2007, according to tax filings obtained by the Guardian from authorities in Missouri.

Brockmeyer, 70, was this week singled out by Department of Justice investigators as being a driving force behind Ferguson’s strategy of using its municipal court to aggressively generate revenues. The policy has been blamed for a breakdown in relations between the city’s overwhelmingly white authorities and residents, two-thirds of whom are African American.

Investigators found Brockmeyer had boasted of creating a range of new court fees, “many of which are widely considered abusive and may be unlawful”. A city councilman opposing the judge’s reappointment was warned “switching judges would/could lead to loss of revenue”.

Brockmeyer, who has been Ferguson’s municipal court judge for 12 years, serves simultaneously as a prosecutor in two nearby cities and as a private attorney. Legal experts said his potentially conflicting interests illustrate a serious problem in the region’s judicial system. Brockmeyer, who reportedly earns $600 per shift as a prosecutor, said last year his dual role benefited defendants. “I see both sides of it,” he said. “I think it’s even better.”

While Brockmeyer owes the US government $172,646 in taxes, his court in Ferguson is at the centre of a class-action federal lawsuit that alleges Ferguson repeatedly “imprisoned a human being solely because the person could not afford to make a monetary payment”.

“Judge Brockmeyer not being incarcerated is a perfect illustration of how we should go about collecting debt from people who owe it,” said Thomas Harvey, the director of Arch City Defenders, one of the legal non-profits representing plaintiffs who were jailed in Ferguson.

Brockmeyer did not respond to multiple emails and telephone calls requesting comment. Federal tax liens filed against Brockmeyer by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) state that he has tens of thousands of dollars in overdue personal income taxes from joint filings with his wife, Amy. He also owes tens of thousands in employer taxes for his law firm and an annual tax paid by employers to fund benefits for the unemployed. Since November 2013, Brockmeyer has paid off another three overdue tax bills totalling $64,599.

He owns three properties in the St Louis area and accompanied his family on a vacation to Walt Disney World in Florida in 2013.

The judge was also named among a group of white Ferguson officials found by the Department of Justice investigators to be writing off citations for themselves and friends while punishing residents for similar offences. Another of these officials, court clerk Mary Ann Twitty, was fired by the city in connection with racist emails also uncovered by the inquiry.

The report said Brockmeyer agreed to “take care” of a speeding ticket for a senior Ferguson police officer in August 2014, and had a red light camera ticket he received himself from the nearby city of Hazelwood dismissed in October 2013.

“Even as Ferguson city officials maintain the harmful stereotype that black individuals lack personal responsibility – and continue to cite this lack of personal responsibility as the cause of the disparate impact of Ferguson’s practices – white city officials condone a striking lack of personal responsibility among themselves and their friends,” the justice department investigators said, in a scathing report on the city’s administration.

The class action lawsuit filed against Ferguson earlier this year alleges that the city violates the constitutional rights of defendants imprisoned over outstanding tickets and minor offences. It seeks compensation and asks a federal judge to force Ferguson to halt the practices.

“Once locked in the Ferguson jail, impoverished people owing debts to the city endure grotesque treatment. They are kept in overcrowded cells; they are denied toothbrushes, toothpaste, and soap; they are subjected to the constant stench of excrement and refuse in their congested cells [and] they are surrounded by walls smeared with mucus and blood,” said one passage of the lawsuit, which went on to name several more hardships.

One of the plaintiffs – Roelif Carter, a 62-year-old disabled military veteran – alleges he was arrested and jailed for three days in Ferguson in 2010 after trying to pay the $100 monthly instalment for his outstanding traffic fines on the second day of the month rather than the first, when it was due. While living in “constant fear” he was arrested and jailed three more times in the following years when he was unable to pay the monthly charge, the lawsuit alleges.

“Most debtors in this country are not rounded up and jailed in brutal conditions,” said Alec Karakatsanis, a co-founder of Equal Justice Under Law and a lead attorney on the lawsuit. “But if you happen to owe your debts to a municipality in St Louis County, they are willing to let you languish there on a ransom.”

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2015/03/ferguson-judge-who-aggressively-fined-and-jailed-poor-residents-owes-170000-in-unpaid-taxes/


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PostPosted: 03/08/15 11:31 am • # 13 
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WTF????? ~ is the "mayor" this willfully oblivious or just stupid? ~ either/or, he's a BIG part of the problem ~ :eek ~ there are "live links" to more/corroborating information in the original ~ Sooz

Ferguson Mayor Rejects Department Of Justice Report, Says There’s ‘No Proof’ City Has A Race Problem
by Carimah Townes Posted on March 7, 2015 at 11:50 am Updated: March 7, 2015 at 1:50 pm

Months after Attorney General Eric Holder launched an investigation of Ferguson Police Department in the wake of Michael Brown’s death, the Department of Justice released a 102-page report detailing systemic race discrimination and abuses of power in the embattled city. But despite the DOJ’s damning findings, the city’s mayor remains unconvinced that widespread problems exist.

“What they’ve shown is that it has happened. Now, how often has that happened? I don’t know. Their assertion is it happens regularly. Based on what? I’m not sure yet,” said Mayor James Knowles III, during an interview Friday. “Do they have a statistic that tells me that they’ve examined every arrest that we’ve made for the past four years and that half, or all, or 10 percent, or 5 percent are unconstitutional or without cause? They do not have that. They have not examined at that level that I know of at this point.”

He also maintains that there is “no proof” of gross civil rights violations.

The mayor is one of many long-standing officials charged with damage control. The city will likely enter an agreement with the DOJ to make systemic reforms, in order to avoid a federal lawsuit. Knowles contends that cleanup efforts are already underway and offer proof that the situation isn’t dire. But the people tasked with implementing changes were heavily involved in establishing the local law enforcement structure. For instance, Judge Ronald J. Brockmeyer imposed steep fines on African Americans but owes $170,000 in unpaid taxes.

According to the DOJ’s findings, African Americans who make up 67 of Ferguson’s population, were involved in 93 percent of arrests, 85 percent of traffic stops, and received 90 percent of tickets issued by officers, from 2012 to 2014. The report also detailed numerous cases in which officers approached black men and women without probable cause. Officers worked with the courts to issue egregious fines and fees to boost city revenue, at the expense of individuals who could not afford to pay them and were subsequently thrown in jail. Police also used excessive force with impunity.

On Friday, Holder announced that he will dismantle the police department if need be.

http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015/03/07/3631113/ferguson-mayor-refutes-doj-report/


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PostPosted: 03/10/15 10:56 am • # 14 
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I'm just sorry this "judge" was allowed to "resign" instead of being impeached or recalled or fired [whichever applied] ~ :ey ~ Sooz

TPM LIVEWIRE
Ferguson Judge Who Imposed High Fines Resigns After Scathing DOJ Report
By Catherine Thompson Published March 10, 2015, 7:57 AM EDT

A Ferguson, Mo. judge who allegedly imposed high fines on residents resigned Monday following the release of a scathing Department of Justice report, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Ronald J. Brockmeyer resigned the same day that the Missouri Supreme Court announced it had reassigned all Ferguson court cases to the circuit court. The Court said in a news release that the move would “help restore public trust and confidence in the Ferguson municipal court division," as quoted by the Post-Dispatch.

The rare move on the part of the Missouri Supreme Court follows the release of a DOJ report alleging racial bias in the Ferguson Police Department, the municipal jail and court.

Brockmeyer was named in that report, which criticized him for "creative" use of fines to generate revenue for the city even as he threw out tickets for himself and his friends, according to the Post-Dispatch.

“I don’t believe the report was correct, but it’s not worth fighting," he told the newspaper.

He added that he was motivated to resign because he and his family had received death threats.

Brockmeyer still serves as a prosecutor in two other towns and as a municipal judge in a third, according to the Post-Dispatch. It's unclear whether Brockmeyer will continue in those positions.

The Guardian previously reported that Brockmeyer also owed the U.S. government more than $170,000 in back taxes.

Brockmeyer told the Post-Dispatch that critics were using the matter of his tax liens to call him a hypocrite. He told the newspaper that some traffic offenders in Ferguson couldn't pay their tickets after being given a third, fourth or even fifth chance to do so.

This post has been updated.

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/ferguson-judge-ronald-brockmeyer-resigns


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PostPosted: 03/10/15 11:24 am • # 15 
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“I don’t believe the report was correct, but it’s not worth fighting," he told the newspaper.

Faith-based rather than fact-based.


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PostPosted: 03/17/15 11:22 am • # 16 
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The lieutenant governor of Missouri speaks and accidentally exposes the alternate reality he lives in ~ :ey ~ there are "live links" to more/corroborating information in the original ~ Sooz

Missouri leader blames Obama, Holder for Ferguson
03/17/15 11:37 AM—Updated 03/17/15 01:08 PM
By Steve Benen

Following up on our previous coverage, the Justice Department’s reports on local government in Ferguson, Missouri, were, in many instances, heartbreaking. The documented evidence was hard to ignore – we were confronted with a picture of systemic, institutional racism on the part of members of the local police and municipal court officials.

There are a variety of ways to respond to the revelations, though Andrew Kaczynski yesterday highlighted one of the more discouraging reactions I’ve seen.

Quote:
The lieutenant governor of Missouri says “there is more racism in the Justice Department” than in the St. Louis area, pointing the finger at President Obama and the Justice Department who, he says, often incited “the mob” in the wake of the shooting of Michael Brown back in August of 2014.

The comments came by way of Missouri Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder, who told NewsMaxTV’s Steve Malzberg that the Justice Department is “staffed with radical, hard-left radical, leftists lawyers.”

After condemning Attorney General Eric Holder as being “unlike any previous attorney general,” Kinder added that “many” DOJ officials “have spent most of their careers defending Black Panthers and other violent radicals.”

Kinder also argued that Obama and Holder were directly responsible for “inciting” a mob and “encouraging disorder in Ferguson and distributing the peaceable going-about of our lives in the greater St. Louis region.” The lieutenant governor went on to argue that there’s “more racism in the Justice Department than there is any, uh, yes, anywhere that I see in the St. Louis area.”

According to the BuzzFeed piece, Kinder argued, “It is the left. It is the Eric Holder and Obama-left and their minions who are obsessed with race. The rest of us are moving on beyond it.”

There’s nothing to suggest the Republican official was kidding.

It’s not unusual in some conservative circles to run into “the real racists” meme. There are others who can speak to this in greater detail, and with far more authority, than I can, but the gist of the phenomenon is the right arguing that those who focus their energies on combating racism tend to be “the real racists.” Why? Because, the argument goes, it’s those who confront and address racism who are responsible for stoking the flames of division.

Or as Kinder put it, the problem is the nation’s first African-American president, the nation’s first African-American attorney general, and their “minions” who are “obsessed with race.”

This isn’t new. Jamelle Bouie noted last year that in 1866, when President Andrew Johnson vetoed a civil rights bill, Johnson argued that the real racists are those who take race into consideration. A century-and-a-half later, the rhetoric hasn’t changed much.

It’s an unfortunate and misguided argument, which obviously hasn’t gone away, and which does not improve with age.

http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/missouri-leader-blames-obama-holder-ferguson


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PostPosted: 03/17/15 1:07 pm • # 17 
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Re-reported from NewsMax. Wonder how reliable that is no matter what Kinder really said or didn't say.


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PostPosted: 03/17/15 4:47 pm • # 18 
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Quote:
Because, the argument goes, it’s those who confront and address racism who are responsible for stoking the flames of division.


Using that same logic, does confronting and addressing abortion or gay rights stoke the flames of division (or hate)?


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