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hardcover

(255 posts)
Wed Mar 4, 2015, 08:57 PM Mar 2015

Eric Holder explains 'Hands up don't shoot' false phenomenon

"I recognize that the findings in our report may leave some to wonder how the department’s findings can differ so sharply from some of the initial, widely reported accounts of what transpired. I want to emphasize that the strength and integrity of America’s justice system has always rested on its ability to deliver impartial results in precisely these types of difficult circumstances – adhering strictly to the facts and the law, regardless of assumptions. Yet it remains not only valid – but essential – to question how such a strong alternative version of events was able to take hold so swiftly, and be accepted so readily. "
http://www.justice.gov/opa/speech/attorney-general-holder-delivers-update-investigations-ferguson-missouri

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Eric Holder explains 'Hands up don't shoot' false phenomenon (Original Post) hardcover Mar 2015 OP
Hate to tell you Eric, but America's justice system is long on strength, short on integrity. Scuba Mar 2015 #1
Message auto-removed Name removed Mar 2015 #2
WTF? Where do you get that? All I see is other incidences of police abuse uppityperson Mar 2015 #3

Response to hardcover (Original post)

uppityperson

(115,677 posts)
3. WTF? Where do you get that? All I see is other incidences of police abuse
Thu Mar 5, 2015, 12:51 AM
Mar 2015
During the summer of 2012, one Ferguson police officer detained a 32-year-old African American man who had just finished playing basketball at a park. The officer approached while the man was sitting in his car and resting. The car’s windows appeared to be more heavily tinted than Ferguson’s code allowed, so the officer did have legitimate grounds to question him. But, with no apparent justification, the officer proceeded to accuse the man of being a pedophile. He prohibited the man from using his cell phone and ordered him out of his car for a pat-down search, even though he had no reason to suspect that the man was armed. And when the man objected – citing his constitutional rights – the police officer drew his service weapon, pointed it at the man’s head, and arrested him on eight different counts. The arrest caused the man to lose his job.
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