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Postby WaTcHeR » 16 Nov 2007, Fri 5:55 pm

tdb13 wrote:
WaTcHeR wrote:Lying cops and the "war on drugs" is a bad combination. I hope the cops get their throats slit in prison.


i hope the same upon you. greg junnier is a good friend of mine.



What a shame that a young kid as yourself looks up to piece of shit like officer Greg Junnier. I sure hope this scum wasn't a mentor to you. You should be careful of the friends you pick, the wrong choice of friends might lead you down the wrong road in life such as Greg Junnier followed.

I hope that he doesn't get his throat slit in jail, that would be too easy on Greg Junnier. Actually what will happen is, he will probably get butt fucked every hour on the hour. He's going to squeal like a pig. I doubt Greg Junnier will be put in general population while in prison, he will probably be put solitary confinement, because he's a big fucking pussy coward.

What a shame that officer Greg Junnier was actually allowed to breed and have "off spring." You gotta feel sorry for his kid. Maybe she will grow up and be a better person than her dad was.
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby tdb13 » 18 Nov 2007, Sun 12:21 am

yea fuck you. say what you want. you got all the right to do so. but get a damn life and stop bitchin about law enforcement. im 17 right? of course im not a big fan of cops but shit people make mistakes. i guarntee he has saved more lives than taken, and i can guarntee that. btw he is having a fairly short sentence. not sure what exactly what it is.

i feel like a damn 13 year old arguing with people like you.

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Postby tdb13 » 18 Nov 2007, Sun 12:27 am

WaTcHeR wrote:
tdb13 wrote:
WaTcHeR wrote:Lying cops and the "war on drugs" is a bad combination. I hope the cops get their throats slit in prison.


i hope the same upon you. greg junnier is a good friend of mine.



What a shame that a young kid as yourself looks up to piece of shit like officer Greg Junnier. I sure hope this scum wasn't a mentor to you. You should be careful of the friends you pick, the wrong choice of friends might lead you down the wrong road in life such as Greg Junnier followed.

I hope that he doesn't get his throat slit in jail, that would be too easy on Greg Junnier. Actually what will happen is, he will probably get butt fucked every hour on the hour. He's going to squeal like a pig. I doubt Greg Junnier will be put in general population while in prison, he will probably be put solitary confinement, because he's a big fucking pussy coward.

What a shame that officer Greg Junnier was actually allowed to breed and have "off spring." You gotta feel sorry for his kid. Maybe she will grow up and be a better person than her dad was.


why should i be careful about being his sons friend. the poor kid is scared to death to do anything wrong cause his dad is a frickin narc officer. his son has nothing wrong with him. shit greg technically did not do any of the other stuff. yea he knew about it. i know its hard to believe but people make mistakes. i know i have.
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Postby WaTcHeR » 18 Nov 2007, Sun 11:34 am

tdb13 wrote:yea fuck you. say what you want. you got all the right to do so. but get a damn life and stop bitchin about law enforcement. im 17 right? of course im not a big fan of cops but shit people make mistakes. i guarntee he has saved more lives than taken, and i can guarntee that. btw he is having a fairly short sentence. not sure what exactly what it is. i feel like a damn 13 year old arguing with people like you.



Of course he will receive a "short sentence," he's a cop. Why is he getting special treatment just because he's a cop? Prison is full of regular people who made mistakes, what makes officer Greg Junnier so special?

btw, what proof can you provide that he has actually saved anyone's life?

Officer Greg Junnier is still a lying piece of shit and a murderer.


tdb13 wrote:why should i be careful about being his sons friend. the poor kid is scared to death to do anything wrong cause his dad is a frickin narc officer. his son has nothing wrong with him. shit greg technically did not do any of the other stuff. yea he knew about it. i know its hard to believe but people make mistakes. i know i have.



You seem like a real idiot or maybe your just young and naive? You feel that office Junnier "technically didn't do anything wrong? Then why did he plead guilty?

Officers J.R. Smith and Gregg Junnier have pleaded guilty in state court to manslaughter, violation of oath, criminal solicitation and making false statements, and in federal court to conspiracy to violate a person's civil rights resulting in death. Smith also pleaded guilty to a state perjury charge. Junnier, who faces more than 10 years in prison, retired from the police force in January.

The police chief is a real pussy for allowing Junnier to retire and not firing him. I suppose the chief felt sorry for Junnier's family. Do you think that your boss would let you retire and get benifits from your job? You would probably be fired.

Keep us informed of your buddy while he's in prison, let us know how many boyfriends he has.
Last edited by WaTcHeR on 18 Nov 2007, Sun 10:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby WaTcHeR » 18 Nov 2007, Sun 11:41 am

Let us not forget about the snitch. There's nothing I hate more other than dirty cops and that's a fucking snitch!

Mr. Fabian Sheats of Atlanta Georgia is a SNITCH and just another pussy and I hope someone kills his ass. Fabian Sheats is no man, he got caught doing something illegal and he tried to weasel out of it by snitching and lying just to save his own ass. Fabian Sheats is just as guilty for killing the 92 year-old woman, as the cops are. Snitches have a very short life span once they are fingered. Fabian Sheats I'm sure your days are numbered in this world.
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Alex White is a snitch

Postby KC » 18 Nov 2007, Sun 1:27 pm

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Informant Alex White


Informant: 'I am a hero'
Sometimes regrets telling FBI of police cover-up

Alex White maintained a year ago he was a "hero" and risked his livelihood and life when he told federal authorities Atlanta cops were trying to cover up the truth about an elderly woman's death in a botched drug raid.

It is still his mantra.

"I am a hero," White said.

But now he feels abandoned by the FBI agents who for months talked to him almost every day.

White admits he's become paranoid. He said it's been two to three months since he spoke to agents. Now, he says, they don't even return his calls.

"Are they mad at me?" said White, whose birth name is Alexis Antonio White.

He sometimes regrets telling federal agents some Atlanta police narcotics officers were trying to get him to lie to help them cover up the circumstances surrounding the killing of a 92-year-old woman who was shot to death by police one year ago this week.

"They've put a strain on my life," White, 25, said in an interview. "Where do I go from here?"

White was a certified confidential informant, having worked with Atlanta's drug officers for four years and considered reliable, when Kathryn Johnston was fatally shot in her living room by police executing a no-knock search warrant on a house where they hoped to find a kilogram of cocaine.

The officers wanted to use White in their operation. He had several drug arrests and spent two years on probation several years ago for a cocaine-related charge. But on Nov. 21, 2006, White wasn't available because he had no transportation to the Neal Street neighborhood in northwest Atlanta to make an undercover buy for the officers.

The truth of what happened next gradually emerged in news reports, interviews and law enforcement records and in court testimony when two narcotics officers — Jason R. Smith and Gregg Junnier — pleaded guilty last April to state and federal charges: Johnson died in a hail of police gunfire, and the next day, the officers involved began working on a cover-up.

They allegedly wanted White to help them.

White's version is police put him in a car and spent hours pressuring him to cooperate. He says he refused, escaped from the vehicle and called federal authorities, who placed him in protective custody.

For seven months, federal investigators kept him in a hotel and called on him often to tell them what he had done and what he had witnessed police officers doing, White said.

The FBI has repeatedly declined to discuss its investigation.

"Do you know what it's like just sitting around, doing what they wanted me to do?" White said of his work with the FBI as it continued its investigation of Smith, Junnier and a third officer who has pending state charges, Arthur Tesler, as well as APD's narcotics unit and the rest of the police agency.

In April, White married the mother of his 7-year-old daughter. In September, they divorced, and he moved in with a friend who lives more than 20 miles from Neal Street, to a location he wants to keep secret.

White blames the stress of the past 12 months for the end of his marriage.

"It was a lot of things at one time," White said.

He wanted someone with him all the time, but at the same time, he wanted to be alone. "I just wanted to drift off. I wanted to disappear," White said.

White sees his daughter regularly and occasionally visits his mother and his younger sister and brother in East Atlanta, but he otherwise stays in his apartment and away from people and the city.

With each passing month, White said, he becomes more and more afraid and more and more angry. He sees law enforcement taking credit "for something they didn't do" in revealing on Neal Street. 'I'm holding a grudge," White said.

At the same time, he insists, "This is a new Alex White" and he refers to the tattoo on his neck that reads, "truly blessed," when he talks of his new attitude and his intent to be a better citizen.

White, who occasionally works laying carpet but otherwise has no other job, has written a letter telling the mayor, the police chief and other officials he plans to sue them over his lost income as an informant, about $20,000 to $30,000 a year.

The letter also says White will ask to be compensated for his daily fear of the police and the drug dealers who now know he may have contributed to their arrests. White says he often sits in his apartment with a screw driver in hand because he is a felon and cannot have a gun for his protection.

"I've got to worry about the cops. I have to worry about the people on the streets [who sell drugs]." White said.

"It's unreal thinking you're going to die, wondering if you're going to get framed.... I wonder is my phone tapped? Are they following me? You know how easy it is to be set up when I'm by myself. That's playing with my mind."

White has mixed feelings about his decision to call federal agents instead of covering for the officers. Is he sorry for what he did?

"In a way, I am. In a way, I'm not," White said. "I'm sorry the lady got killed. I'm sorry I said anything [to the FBI]. November 21st changed my life."

http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/ ... _1119.html
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Postby KC » 18 Nov 2007, Sun 1:29 pm

Alex White is a snitch who is paid by the state. Alex White more than likely is a criminal who didn't want to go to jail, so he became a snitch and started ruining other people lives.
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Postby WaTcHeR » 21 Nov 2007, Wed 6:54 pm

ATLANTA — The family of a 92-year-old woman fatally shot during a botched drug raid has filed a lawsuit against the city and police on the first anniversary of the killing.

The State Court lawsuit was filed Wednesday by a niece of Kathryn Johnston, accusing them of racketeering, civil rights violations, assault, false imprisonment and negligence.

The suit targets the city, Police Chief Richard Pennington and five current and former police officers. The family is seeking unspecified damages.

Hezekiah Sistrunk Jr., an attorney for the niece, Sarah Dozier, said they had attempted to talk to the city about a settlement.

"That has been unsuccessful. That is why we are here today," he said at a news conference.

Plainclothes narcotics officers burst into Johnston's home Nov. 21, 2006, using a no-knock warrant. Johnston was killed during the raid in a hail of nearly 40 police gunshots.

Prosecutors said the officers obtained the warrant by falsely telling a judge that an informant confirmed drug dealing at the home. The informant later told federal investigators he was told by police to concoct the tale.

Prosecutors also said that one of the police officers planted three bags of marijuana in Johnston's home as part of a cover-up after no drugs were found.

The suit accuses officers who raided the home of violating Johnston's constitutional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures and the use of unreasonable and excessive deadly force. It cites witness tampering in its racketeering accusation.

Prosecutors charged three officers involved in the raid. Two of the officers, Jason R. Smith and Gregg Junnier, pleaded guilty to state manslaughter and federal civil rights charges. They have left the police force. A judge Tuesday ordered the two to turn themselves in by Dec. 3. No sentencing date has been set.

A third officer, Arthur Tesler, who is on administrative leave, faces charges of violating the oath of a public officer, making false statements and false imprisonment under color of legal process. His attorney has said Tesler expects to go to trial.

All three are named as defendants in the lawsuit.

"I am thankful my aunt's innocence has been proven," Dozier said in a statement read to reporters. "I am deeply saddened that the city of Atlanta and its chief of police have refused to admit responsibility for unconstitutional policies, lack of supervision and inadequate training of police officers that ultimately killed her."

Dozier was not present at the news conference.

Beverly Isom, a spokeswoman for Mayor Shirley Franklin, declined to comment on the suit, referring calls to an attorney for the city. The attorney, Jerry De Loach, declined to comment, saying the city had yet to be served with the lawsuit and wanted to review it before responding.

Officer Ronald Campbell, a spokesman for Atlanta police, said, "We are unable to comment on anything because of the legalities of it."


http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jrny ... AD8T27L981
Last edited by WaTcHeR on 05 Jan 2008, Sat 9:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby WaTcHeR » 21 Nov 2007, Wed 6:57 pm

You take these five police officers hang them by the balls and shoot them in the head, other police officers might think twice before they do something like this.
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby KC » 07 Dec 2007, Fri 6:51 pm

ATLANTA --

A man who made his living as a confidential informant sued the city and police department Tuesday, claiming he lost his job after a botched drug raid in which officers killed a 92-year-old woman.

Alex White claims police held him against his will for hours in hopes he would help them cover up their mistakes in the death of Kathryn Johnston, a scandal that continues to reverberate within the police department.

White's federal civil rights lawsuit names the city, police Chief Richard Pennington and at least 11 police officers or supervisors. It requests that White be compensated for lost wages, emotional distress and attorney's fees.

White, 25, had brought in up to $30,000 a year "snitching" for police, said his attorney, Fenn Little Jr.

White was in protective custody for seven months while working with federal prosecutors on the case against three officers involved in the raid.

His life was "essentially ruined" because of the case, Little said. Now that his name and face have been widely publicized, he has to find a new line of work, he said.

Johnston was killed in a hail of nearly 40 police gunshots Nov. 21, 2006, when plainclothes narcotics officers burst into her home using a no-knock warrant. The officers had falsely told a judge that an informant had confirmed drug dealing there, prosecutors say.

Two of the officers charged in the raid pleaded guilty to state manslaughter and federal civil rights charges in April and have left the force. No sentencing date has been set in their case.

A third officer is on administrative leave and faces charges of violating the oath of a public officer, making false statements and false imprisonment under color of legal process.

White's lawsuit, citing "systematic corruption" with the police department, asks that the court issue an injunction against the department's use of confidential informants unless a judge sees proof of the informant's work in the case.

Police spokesman James Polite referred questions about the lawsuit to City Attorney Elizabeth Chandler, who declined to comment, saying the city had not been served with the lawsuit.

Johnston's niece, Sarah Dozier, filed a lawsuit in state court last month, accusing the city of racketeering, civil rights violations, assault, false imprisonment and negligence. Chandler said the city is reviewing that lawsuit.
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Postby WaTcHeR » 05 Jan 2008, Sat 9:07 pm

On the eve of the one-year anniversary of the worst scandal to hit the Atlanta Police Department in his four years as leader, Chief Richard Pennington announced that the department's newly revamped anti-drug section is "the best-trained narcotics unit in the Southeast."

With Mayor Shirley Franklin by his side, Pennington said the Nov. 21, 2006, police killing of Kathryn Johnston, 92, in her home on the city's northwest side was a tragedy that "tore at the heart of the community" and caused an overhaul of police training and procedures to ensure such a thing doesn't happen again.

Even as Pennington spoke, lawyers for Johnston's family were readying a suit against the chief, the mayor, the city and the police officers directly involved in the shooting.

They were set to file their suit this morning.

Police had raided the house on Neal Street with sketchy information provided by an informant.

They used a "no-knock" search warrant, meaning they could enter the house without warning.

A fearful Johnston apparently thought the police were criminals and brought out an old gun to stop the intruders. She fired one shot and missed.

Police fired multiple times, killing her and wounding other officers.
The fiasco caused national headlines and led to a federal investigation of Atlanta police, and an almost year-long hiatus on police efforts to shut down drug houses in Georgia's largest city.

The reborn unit --- doubled from 15 officers to 30 --- has b

een up and running since the first week of October, Pennington said.
Franklin said the botched drug raid, in which Johnston was fatally shot and at least some of the officers participating tried to cover up the crime, was "a horrible night for the Johnston family, for our community and for our Police Department" but her administration was "well on the way to restoring trust for the Police Department, trust that was fractured last year."

As of Tuesday afternoon, Johnston's relatives and their supporters did not appear to believe such a restoration was under way.

At a news conference in front of Johnston's boarded-up home, Markel Hutchins, an Atlanta minister who is serving as the family's spokesman, said the family was glad to see the Police Department changes, but they want more.

"We are encouraged by the steps," Hutchins said. "We have a long way to go."

Johnston's family was not present at the news conference, but Hutchins said they want the city to provide them with a "substantial cash settlement," rename Neal Street after Johnston, and preserve her house as a memorial to what happened.

They also want an apology from the mayor, he said. Hutchins said Franklin has never tried to contact the family.

Asked if she felt the city was responsible for Johnston's death, Franklin said, "I apologized then and I will continue to apologize for this tragedy."

At his news conference at police headquarters, Pennington detailed his overhaul of the narcotics unit, including replacing everyone in the entire unit and putting the new officers through extensive training from outside police agencies.

Other APD narcotics changes include:

* "No-knock" search warrants must be approved by a major.

* Search warrants must be approved by a lieutenant.

* Drugs seized must be field-tested.

* Officers conducting raids will wear special uniforms, not street clothes.

* Narcotics unit officers will be interviewed annually and given random drug tests.

* Informants receiving money for information will have to be paid in the presence of a supervisor.

The head of the new narcotics unit, Lt. William Trivelpiece, said "there is a lot more structure and layered supervision" in the new procedures.

Hoping to improve the department's frayed relations with the community, Pennington announced he and his staff would attend a special church service for Johnston this evening in the English Avenue neighborhood where the shooting happened.

Hutchins said he and Johnston family supporters will attend as well.
"We are very, very serious about re-engaging with the community," Franklin said.
Some citizens remain unconvinced.

Dremecia Sumpter, 27, a mother of five who has lived two doors down from the Johnston house since about a month before the shooting, said police presence in the neighborhood remains spotty and community relations are poor.

She said kids partying on the corner of Joseph E. Lowery Boulevard and Neal Street got into a fight several weeks ago and shots were fired. She said police took half an hour to respond.

"The police aren't patrolling this area at all, anyway, anyhow," she said.
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby fed up in SA » 14 May 2008, Wed 7:34 pm

Wow, Ancap, I couldn't have said it better myself. The boy would be a fool to respond.
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Postby fed up in SA » 14 May 2008, Wed 7:37 pm

He actually responded. Oh, well, enough said.
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Postby WaTcHeR » 14 May 2008, Wed 8:52 pm

Image
Officer Arthur Tesler

ATLANTA, Georgia -- A former Atlanta police officer on trial for a botched drug raid that led to the death of a 92-year-old woman said Wednesday that he went along with a coverup because he felt threatened by his fellow officers.

Officer Arthur Tesler testified in Fulton County Superior Court that he was instructed by two other officers after the shooting to memorize a coverup story that they had witnessed an informant buying drugs at the home of Kathryn Johnston.

But during often tearful testimony, Tesler said he eventually decided to cooperate with federal investigators because he "couldn't take it anymore."

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who was sitting in the courtroom, called the testimony "chilling."

Tesler is charged with lying in an official investigation, violating his oath as an officer and false imprisonment.

Johnston was killed November 26, 2006, when she was shot 39 times as plainclothes narcotics officers busted into her house using a "no-knock" warrant. Johnston fired one shot from a pistol as police were breaking down her door, but she did not hit any of the officers.

Tesler's trial is probably the only one in the Johnston shooting, because former officers Jason R. Smith and Gregg Junnier have already pleaded guilty to state manslaughter and federal civil rights charges.

The fatal shooting led to sharp criticism of the police department, a shakeup of the narcotics unit and a review of how officers obtain and use no-knock warrants, which are intended to keep drug suspects from having time to destroy evidence.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/05/14/eld ... ootout.ap/
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby WaTcHeR » 14 May 2008, Wed 8:54 pm

I wonder how many other lives Officer Arthur Tesler has ruined by lying? Officer Arthur Tesler was just another coward hiding behind a shield and a gun and got caught lying and turned on his fellow buddies in hopes to save his own ass. I say give the bastard ten years in prison to think about what he did. Sworn officer of the law my ass!
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby WaTcHeR » 14 May 2008, Wed 10:45 pm

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"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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Postby tdb13 » 16 May 2008, Fri 1:03 pm

hey everyone, go fuck yourselves
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Postby KC » 16 May 2008, Fri 1:16 pm

tdb13 wrote:hey everyone, go fuck yourselves


tdb13 seems to be in a foul mood today!?! He's boyfriend must have broke up with him.
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Postby WaTcHeR » 21 May 2008, Wed 9:03 pm

ATLANTA -- In a verdict that brought tears to both sides of an Atlanta courtroom Tuesday, a jury convicted a police officer of lying to cover up his role in the fatal shooting of a 92-year-old woman.

Arthur Bruce Tesler, 42, is the only officer to face trial in the death of Kathryn Johnston, felled by a hail of bullets after plainclothes narcotics officers burst into her home in November 2006. He faces as many as five years in prison.

After deliberating more than three days, the state court jury acquitted Tesler of violating his oath of office and of false imprisonment under color of legal process. If convicted of all three charges, he could have faced as many as 20 years in prison.

Unlike two officers who testified against him, he was on duty outside Johnston's house and never fired a shot.

The Rev. Markel Hutchins, a community activist who represents Johnston's family, described the verdict as "bittersweet."

"Juries typically don't convict police officers," he said. ". . . Nothing can bring back Kathryn Johnston, but to the extent that her life can be used to make sure that no more citizens are violated, we think it is a step in the right direction."

Others were more blunt.

"Justice has not been done," said State Rep. "Able" Mabel Thomas. "This officer lied, this officer was part of the coverup. Blood was on his hands."

Johnston's shooting stirred up a whirlwind of protest about aggressive policing in her predominantly African American neighborhood of southwest Atlanta and triggered a federal probe into corruption in the Atlanta Police Department.

Last year, state prosecutors dropped murder, burglary and assault charges against two officers in exchange for their cooperation with a federal investigation into what the U.S. attorney here has described as a "culture of misconduct." Jason R. Smith and Gregg Junnier pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and federal civil rights charges. Junnier faces 10 years behind bars and Smith faces 12, but they have yet to be sentenced. The federal probe continues.

The shooting occurred two days before Thanksgiving, when officers burst through Johnston's front door without knocking after an informant provided false information that drugs were being sold at her house. She fired a single shot from a .38-caliber revolver but did not hit anyone. The officers fired 39 shots, striking Johnston five or six times.

Prosecutors say the officers lied to a magistrate to get the no-knock warrant, claiming that a confidential informant had made a purchase at the address and that the house was fitted with electronic surveillance. Both claims were false.

According to testimony, officers handcuffed Johnston as she lay dying, planted three bags of marijuana in her basement, and asked an informant to pretend that the officers had sent him to her home earlier to purchase drugs.

In his testimony, Tesler, a junior detective who had worked on the narcotics unit for less than a year, admitted that he had lied to help cover up the botched raid. But he said he did not know that Smith had lied to a judge to obtain the no-knock warrant.

In closing statements Thursday, his attorney, William McKenney, argued that Tesler was just a rookie who went along with the coverup because he felt intimidated by his more experienced partners.

Since the shooting, the Atlanta Police Department has tried to address claims that narcotics officers routinely lied to obtain search warrants and planted drugs at crime scenes so they could make arrest quotas. Police Chief Richard J. Pennington disbanded the narcotics unit, then reformulated it and doubled its size. The department also introduced more stringent requirements for how officers can obtain search warrants.

Last year, the Atlanta City Council created a citizen review board to investigate allegations of police misconduct.

On Tuesday, Fulton County Dist. Atty. Paul Howard said he hoped the Tesler verdict would bring "some closure" to Johnston's family. With the three officers involved in the shooting incarcerated, he said, "as a community, we should be pleased."


http://www.latimes.com/news/printeditio ... 1049.story
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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WaTcHeR
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Postby WaTcHeR » 21 May 2008, Wed 9:03 pm

Let this lesson to all you mother fucking cops that lie, you know who you. A little lie here and a little over up there to get a bust or a conviction will catch up with you as it did to officer Arthur Tesler. Lets hope that the judge gives him those five years in prison and not probation.
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
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WaTcHeR
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Posts: 7816
Joined: 04 Mar 2007, Sun 1:25 pm
Location: Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

Postby WaTcHeR » 10 Jul 2008, Thu 11:57 pm

<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/vzObUad14ng&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/vzObUad14ng&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
"Cops that lie, need to die! Police officers that lie so that a person is fined, arrested or convicted should be shot in the head. If a cop ruins an innocent family's life, then the life of that cop and his family should be ruined as well."

"In the U.S., a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt."

"The U.S. Government does not have rights, it has privileges delegated to it by the people."
User avatar
WaTcHeR
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Posts: 7816
Joined: 04 Mar 2007, Sun 1:25 pm
Location: Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

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