Thursday, April 09, 2015

Police Share Tricks of the Trade Part 3

Part three of the Palm Beach blog...

Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 6:46 am
Guest wrote:I was lucky to get a really good FTO when I started almost 15 years ago. He taught me to always keep learning new skills and techniques. It's not always easy to do being in a zone with the same old people so I decided perhaps I would share and maybe you might also.

I have a method for getting people off the street that should not be there. Mouthy drivers, street lawyers, assholes and just anyone else trying to make my job difficult.

Under my floor mat, I keep a small plastic dime baggie with Cocaine in residue. Since it's just residue, if it is ever found during a search of my car like during an inspection, it's easy enough to explain. It must have stuck to my foot while walking through San Castle. Anyways, no one's going to question an empty baggie. The residue is the key because yo7 can fully charge some asshole with possession of cocaine, heroin, or whatever just with the residue. How to get it done? "I asked Mr. DOE for his identification. And he pulled out his wallet, I observed a small plastic baggie fall out of his pocket..." Tou get the idea. easy, right?

Best part is, those baggies can be found lots of places so you can always be ready. Don't forget to wipe the baggie on the persons skin after you arrest them because you want their DNA on the bag if they say you planted it or fight it in court.

This is one of my favorite tools. I don't use it often but when I have to do something to remove someone, this is a good way to do it with minimal effort.


I'll be collecting police reports already floating around online and newer reports using FOIA to match your writing style. I'll also be posing this to anon forums because you're exactly the type of person they hate.

Between this post and your news interview we have more than enough text to identify your style.

QED Forensic Linguistics AKA You should have kept your mouth shut. :mrgreen:
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 7:23 am
Guest wrote:I'll be collecting police reports already floating around online and newer reports using FOIA to match your writing style. I'll also be posing this to anon forums because you're exactly the type of person they hate.

Between this post and your news interview we have more than enough text to identify your style.

QED Forensic Linguistics AKA You should have kept your mouth shut. :mrgreen:


this post shows me your a dumbshit civilian that doesn't know shit. We don't type our own reports. We dictate them. go fuck your mother
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 10:42 am
Guest wrote:I was lucky to get a really good FTO when I started almost 15 years ago. He taught me to always keep learning new skills and techniques. It's not always easy to do being in a zone with the same old people so I decided perhaps I would share and maybe you might also.

I have a method for getting people off the street that should not be there. Mouthy drivers, street lawyers, assholes and just anyone else trying to make my job difficult.

Under my floor mat, I keep a small plastic dime baggie with Cocaine in residue. Since it's just residue, if it is ever found during a search of my car like during an inspection, it's easy enough to explain. It must have stuck to my foot while walking through San Castle. Anyways, no one's going to question an empty baggie. The residue is the key because yo7 can fully charge some asshole with possession of cocaine, heroin, or whatever just with the residue. How to get it done? "I asked Mr. DOE for his identification. And he pulled out his wallet, I observed a small plastic baggie fall out of his pocket..." Tou get the idea. easy, right?

Best part is, those baggies can be found lots of places so you can always be ready. Don't forget to wipe the baggie on the persons skin after you arrest them because you want their DNA on the bag if they say you planted it or fight it in court.

This is one of my favorite tools. I don't use it often but when I have to do something to remove someone, this is a good way to do it with minimal effort.


Your nothing but an effen parasite with a badge. I hope, the next time you exit your vehicle an 18 wheeler takes you out.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 11:30 am
Guest wrote:Your nothing but an effen parasite with a badge. I hope, the next time you exit your vehicle an 18 wheeler takes you out.


This is a site for law enforcement officers, so we don't care what you think. Go find your own web forum, "effen" hippie. You will be lucky not to get your gut smashed in by my PR-24
fuckdalaw420

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby fuckdalaw420 » Mon Feb 23, 2015 11:34 am
:D Fuckkkkkkkkkkk youuuuuu John deerrrrrr
Lovinnnnn assssss pigsssssssssss. why don't you go talk about how to f****** shove a stick up your assand roast each other by the fire
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 12:27 pm
Guest wrote:
Guest wrote:Your nothing but an effen parasite with a badge. I hope, the next time you exit your vehicle an 18 wheeler takes you out.


This is a site for law enforcement officers, so we don't care what you think. Go find your own web forum, "effen" hippie. You will be lucky not to get your gut smashed in by my PR-24


No hippie here, boy. I have many friends in LE. They are honorable and decent men who would never condone this crap. Unfortunately, you and your filthy ilk give all the good men bad names. "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely" John Acton

As to your covert, keyboard commando thereat, Are you really so arrogant as to think you're the only one with training...You'd never get close enough.

Believe me.

We laugh at your type.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 3:00 pm
Guest wrote:I have a special one reserved for the biggest shitheads. After their arrest put some dope in their pocket and let the jailer find it. Booya! Charged with introduction of contraband bitches! Minimum mandatory for that one!


You fucking sicko. You fucking piece of shit. You burn in hell for the things you do, I pray to Christmas you do and I know you will. I have something for you too, just wait. You sorry sack of cocksucking piss on the Constitution faggot. Fuck you and your mother too.
Raindancer

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Raindancer » Mon Feb 23, 2015 3:20 pm
Don't believe anything this "tricks of the trade" person says. They're making it all up. Hiding residue bags under the floormat in a cruiser? Planting drugs on someone after they arrest them? These things are a lot harder to pull off than is being indicated.

First off, honest and reputable police officers don't need to do stuff like that. Secondly, any defense attorney worth their weight in salt would get those charges easily dismissed. Particularly the one where shithead claims that he can arrest someone, then put drugs in their pocket so the jailers would find them. In reality, that would be a nightmare for the arresting officer. We all know about chain of custody. What would really happen is the arresting officer would be up shit creek in a chicken wire boat. Especially if a good defense attorney got the officer's print or DNA off the bag. State attorney's office wouldn't touch that with a 10 foot pole.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 3:36 pm
Raindancer wrote:Don't believe anything this "tricks of the trade" person says. They're making it all up. Hiding residue bags under the floormat in a cruiser? Planting drugs on someone after they arrest them? These things are a lot harder to pull off than is being indicated.

First off, honest and reputable police officers don't need to do stuff like that. Secondly, any defense attorney worth their weight in salt would get those charges easily dismissed. Particularly the one where shithead claims that he can arrest someone, then put drugs in their pocket so the jailers would find them. In reality, that would be a nightmare for the arresting officer. We all know about chain of custody. What would really happen is the arresting officer would be up shit creek in a chicken wire boat. Especially if a good defense attorney got the officer's print or DNA off the bag. State attorney's office wouldn't touch that with a 10 foot pole.


Yeah! No one at this department would ever plant evidence or lie on a police report or warrant! Hey, and the head if Internal Affairs, Major Van Reeth, would never post with a cocaine-addicted naked prostitute in the middle of a golf course with his underage son and the treasurer for the West Palm Beach PBA. And the Sheriff himself would never lie about evidence to incarcerate a black man, and he would never steal a gun from the evidence room to plant on black people! They would never cover up a murder to hide an affair, either! These things are all lies! Please don't click on the links for the official documentation though...
Raindancer

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Raindancer » Mon Feb 23, 2015 3:50 pm
You missed my point entirely.

I'm aware of all of that stuff you cited. What does any of it have to do with my comment about reputable and honest police officers not having to do that, and chain of custody as it pertains to this thread, and a state attorney not wanting to touch it with a 10 foot pole?

Those instances you cite have nothing to do with honest and reputable professional law enforcement folks.

Plant evidence of someone illegally, and there's probably a better chance of being found out than the person you planted it on being prosecuted. A good defense attorney would run that shit down. Is it really worth it for the officer? That's an awfully big chance to take with one's livelihood.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 4:24 pm
A good defense attorney might get it tossed out here in Palm Beach County, but our SAO knows better than to prosecute any of us. He pulls that shit and all of a sudden he's going to have cops missing depos, not appearing for trials, forgetting important testimony and generally making his life a living hell. Our state attorney Aronboy (that's Dave Aronberg for you people that don't know) is a scared lottle pussy and does whatever he can to play ball with us.
Raindancer

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Raindancer » Mon Feb 23, 2015 4:47 pm
The State Attorney in Broward (Mike Satz) for many years didn't like prosecuting cops or political types. But ever since Scott Israel has taken over as sheriff, several cops have been busted and successfully prosecuted. A few political types too, which is a real rarity. The lesson I learned is that Satz just follows the lead of whoever is sheriff. If Bradshaw was not as crooked as hillbilly teeth and told the SAO he wanted bad cops arrested and prosecuted, maybe the SAO would move on it. But it seems as though the only ones interested in cleaning up PBC is the feds. Massilotti, McCarthy, Green, etc.

BTW, Massilotti is a good guy and those charges were BS.
neidermeyer

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby neidermeyer » Mon Feb 23, 2015 6:45 pm
I just love seeing you rat bastards eat yourselves... I am not a cop and you couldn't pay me enough to be one ,, I have morals... and a few relatives that are cops so I know the stories too and I've seen my cousins "retirement policy" , a closet full of coke and cash...

Maybe a new topic is in order ,,, "I can remember when I last DIDN'T lie to get a warrant" or "I DIDN'T TESTILYE in court yesterday , Yippee!"

FWIW I'm in Orange County and our sheriff/sheriffs office is almost as corrupt as yours is.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Feb 23, 2015 6:51 pm
Raindancer wrote:You missed my point entirely.

I'm aware of all of that stuff you cited. What does any of it have to do with my comment about reputable and honest police officers not having to do that, and chain of custody as it pertains to this thread, and a state attorney not wanting to touch it with a 10 foot pole?

Those instances you cite have nothing to do with honest and reputable professional law enforcement folks.

Plant evidence of someone illegally, and there's probably a better chance of being found out than the person you planted it on being prosecuted. A good defense attorney would run that shit down. Is it really worth it for the officer? That's an awfully big chance to take with one's livelihood.


Plant evidence of someone illegally, and there's probably a better chance of being found out than the person you planted it on being prosecuted

I disagree. In the entire time I've been involved in law enforcement in Palm Beach County (a long time) I can't recall a single instance of a deputy or officer being prosecuted for doing that. Not once. And we've had extremely dirty cops in PBC---wearing green, blue and tan. Murder, rape, robbery, drug dealing and more all on duty and yet there hasn't been one prosecution for evidence planting--precisely because it's a nearly impossible crime to prove absent some video evidence. And yes, it is a big chance to take with one's livelihood---but nobody who engages in corruption of any kind does so with the expectation that they'll get caught. Ask all of the former deputies or officers now in prison if they thought for one second they'd get caught, and the answer is no. We are given a great deal of power with our profession and with that power must come great responsibility, a high ethical standard, and no tolerance for anyone who would use the uniform and profession to commit crime or engage in corruption.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Tue Feb 24, 2015 3:57 am
Guest wrote:I disagree. In the entire time I've been involved in law enforcement in Palm Beach County (a long time) I can't recall a single instance of a deputy or officer being prosecuted for doing that. Not once. And we've had extremely dirty cops in PBC---wearing green, blue and tan. Murder, rape, robbery, drug dealing and more all on duty and yet there hasn't been one prosecution for evidence planting--precisely because it's a nearly impossible crime to prove absent some video evidence. And yes, it is a big chance to take with one's livelihood---but nobody who engages in corruption of any kind does so with the expectation that they'll get caught. Ask all of the former deputies or officers now in prison if they thought for one second they'd get caught, and the answer is no. We are given a great deal of power with our profession and with that power must come great responsibility, a high ethical standard, and no tolerance for anyone who would use the uniform and profession to commit crime or engage in corruption.

Amen brother! We wont get caught planting evidence. I don't see any day this will happen. I don't do it much but some one my fellow road toads do it like every week. The up side is its nice to have something to charge someone with. get me a good stat when my arrests for the month are low. Don't need shit from some paper pusher sitting in his fukkin office. heres my green and white policy: If they black, put them in the back! :lol: :lol:
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Tue Feb 24, 2015 9:39 am
Why do so many pbso deputies come on here in spill hate on Black people like it is cool to mistreat any body because of their race.For the low life who policy is if you are black you get in the back of your green and white you need your ass kicked
your wife must feel ashamed to be fucking and sucking a little boy 2 inch DICK.Go do the job you was hired to do with morals and a real back bone to uphold the law silly immature spineless crab. :(
Raindancer

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Raindancer » Tue Feb 24, 2015 10:16 am
You guys are so full of shit. Any officer that would do that would be wise not to write about it on the internet. How long do you think it would take the feds to run you down? If you claimed to be BSO rather than PBSO, Scott Israel's public corruption unit would bust you real quick. Matter of fact, there's a story in today's Sun-Sentinel about a cop who is about to be fired for stealing a memory card from someone's cellphone. I'm not saying that there's no dishonest police officers out there. What I'm saying is that they are very few in numbers, and the ones that are dirty don't brag about it on the internet. Gees.
Mannie

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Mannie » Tue Feb 24, 2015 10:50 am
And cops wonder why people want to see cops dead? Ones like the Palm Beach officer cited, and a couple of others in this thread, if they aren't just internet poseurs, should be dead.

Others talk about good cops. If there are good cops, they would be arresting the bad cops. That isn't happening, is it? They are just the Blue Gang. Unfortunately, we need them sometimes.

Meanwhile, if you ever sit on a jury, now you know why cops' testimony is about as trustworthy as a crack whore's.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Tue Feb 24, 2015 11:18 am
Raindancer wrote:You guys are so full of shit. Any officer that would do that would be wise not to write about it on the internet. How long do you think it would take the feds to run you down? If you claimed to be BSO rather than PBSO, Scott Israel's public corruption unit would bust you real quick. Matter of fact, there's a story in today's Sun-Sentinel about a cop who is about to be fired for stealing a memory card from someone's cellphone. I'm not saying that there's no dishonest police officers out there. What I'm saying is that they are very few in numbers, and the ones that are dirty don't brag about it on the internet. Gees.


How long do you think it would take the feds to run you down

I wouldn't count on "The Feds" to be the antidote for any type of police corruption in this county. Again, let's look at history. The may be good at getting corrupt politicians, but in Palm Beach County they haven't put away too many cops. In fact, I can only recall two. One from West Palm Beach Police (Herman Tureaud for laundering drug money) and one from PBSO (James Tacktikos for shaking down immigrants in Lake Worth) and both of those cases were close to or over 10 years ago.
Raindancer

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Raindancer » Tue Feb 24, 2015 12:24 pm
10 years ago, the internet was nothing like it is now. Any police officer who uses an internet chat board as a forum to brag about planting evidence on defendants probably isn't really a police officer or is just an incredibly stupid person. For all we know, the feds and or local authorities may have already initiated an investigation and looked at IP addresses and determined it's all BS. Otherwise, we would have seen film at 11.
Anonymous One

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Anonymous One » Tue Feb 24, 2015 8:16 pm
Guest wrote:Question for the REAL deputies...

What are the odds this is either somebody pretending to be a deputy just repeating stories heard here or elsewhere, or a former deputy who was fired pretending he's still currently employed by PBSO? My bet's on the latter... would like the author of the story to tell the details of how they verified the person's status.



Umm..., the odds are very good that he is a real pbso and telling the truth. His identification was verified by the dc post which is actually credible and not just a blogging site as claimed by the idiot in another post here. The dc post is the washington post newspaper( like the palm beach post). It is the source for news in washington dc. Why everyone is so opposed as to believing these things are possible is beyond me, i have lived in west palm beach for over 35 years and know for a fact they have been corrupt at least that long, and i'm sure it's even longer than that. Back in the late 80's i used to buy weed from a quite a few different pbso's. Some of them sold what they confiscated, others were actually dealing drugs. In the late 90's i know of a beating by about 7 officers on 1 person while he was handcuffed and hogtied from a routine traffic stop and everything was covered up and the sheriff's department bought the lawyer right out from under defendant and hired them for their attorney's and the defendant was told they could no longer defend him that they were hired by pbso. So yeah corruption without a doubt.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Tue Feb 24, 2015 9:07 pm
Anonymous One wrote:Umm..., the odds are very good that he is a real pbso and telling the truth. His identification was verified by the dc post which is actually credible and not just a blogging site as claimed by the idiot in another post here. The dc post is the washington post newspaper( like the palm beach post). It is the source for news in washington dc. Why everyone is so opposed as to believing these things are possible is beyond me, i have lived in west palm beach for over 35 years and know for a fact they have been corrupt at least that long, and i'm sure it's even longer than that. Back in the late 80's i used to buy weed from a quite a few different pbso's. Some of them sold what they confiscated, others were actually dealing drugs. In the late 90's i know of a beating by about 7 officers on 1 person while he was handcuffed and hogtied from a routine traffic stop and everything was covered up and the sheriff's department bought the lawyer right out from under defendant and hired them for their attorney's and the defendant was told they could no longer defend him that they were hired by pbso. So yeah corruption without a doubt.


hahahahahahahahahahahaha

Way to establish some real credibility there... you just told us all everything we need to know about your level of intelligence (or lack thereof)!!!!!!

Two web sites:

http://dcpost.org/

http://www.washingtonpost.com/

Now tell me again... which one of those is the "source for news in washington dc"?????
Anonymous One

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Anonymous One » Tue Feb 24, 2015 10:51 pm
Guest wrote:
Anonymous One wrote:Umm..., the odds are very good that he is a real pbso and telling the truth. His identification was verified by the dc post which is actually credible and not just a blogging site as claimed by the idiot in another post here. The dc post is the washington post newspaper( like the palm beach post). It is the source for news in washington dc. Why everyone is so opposed as to believing these things are possible is beyond me, i have lived in west palm beach for over 35 years and know for a fact they have been corrupt at least that long, and i'm sure it's even longer than that. Back in the late 80's i used to buy weed from a quite a few different pbso's. Some of them sold what they confiscated, others were actually dealing drugs. In the late 90's i know of a beating by about 7 officers on 1 person while he was handcuffed and hogtied from a routine traffic stop and everything was covered up and the sheriff's department bought the lawyer right out from under defendant and hired them for their attorney's and the defendant was told they could no longer defend him that they were hired by pbso. So yeah corruption without a doubt.


hahahahahahahahahahahaha

Way to establish some real credibility there... you just told us all everything we need to know about your level of intelligence (or lack thereof)!!!!!!

Two web sites:

http://dcpost.org/

http://www.washingtonpost.com/

Now tell me again... which one of those is the "source for news in washington dc"?????


Umm yeah idiot they are very credible, as credible as the Washington Post. I meant they are like the Washington Post and the Palm Beach Post, not that they are one and the same, i accidentally left out the word like between them. You are just another one of those scumbags who think because you are the law, that makes you above the law.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Wed Feb 25, 2015 5:34 am
A Washington D.C. Resident here - I've been reading the DC Post since I became a staffer here on the hill 2 years ago. The DC Post is much different from the Washington Post in that the DC Post only writes about happenings in governments. The Washington Post does government stories but they also write about entertainment, sports and gossip. They are bo th excellent newspapers but the DC Post tends not to have a political bias since they always match a fact checker of the opposite party as the writer. If the DC Post wrote it, it's pretty much guaranteed to be unbaised fact. Good morning, America!
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Wed Feb 25, 2015 6:13 am
Oh this is great, it's amazing to see this little fire started inside of the pbso. This is coming to light and people don't believe that you are honest, good natured officers looking out for the good of the people. Fuck the police. Have fun comparing dick sizes.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Wed Feb 25, 2015 9:57 am
Guest wrote:A Washington D.C. Resident here - I've been reading the DC Post since I became a staffer here on the hill 2 years ago. The DC Post is much different from the Washington Post in that the DC Post only writes about happenings in governments. The Washington Post does government stories but they also write about entertainment, sports and gossip. They are bo th excellent newspapers but the DC Post tends not to have a political bias since they always match a fact checker of the opposite party as the writer. If the DC Post wrote it, it's pretty much guaranteed to be unbaised fact. Good morning, America!


Oh shut up, that's complete BS.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Wed Feb 25, 2015 10:49 am
Guest wrote:
Guest wrote:A Washington D.C. Resident here - I've been reading the DC Post since I became a staffer here on the hill 2 years ago. The DC Post is much different from the Washington Post in that the DC Post only writes about happenings in governments. The Washington Post does government stories but they also write about entertainment, sports and gossip. They are bo th excellent newspapers but the DC Post tends not to have a political bias since they always match a fact checker of the opposite party as the writer. If the DC Post wrote it, it's pretty much guaranteed to be unbaised fact. Good morning, America!


Oh shut up, that's complete BS.

Teri Barbera, is that you? Sorry, your damage control isn't effective anymore. They people USED to believe you... but they don't believe you anymore.
No Surprise

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby No Surprise » Sun Mar 01, 2015 2:55 pm
I have been an Assistant Public Defender in Palm Beach County for almost thirty years now. Thought this day would never come. AT LAST! The public hears it from the mouth of a serving officer: THIS. IS. DONE. ALL. THE. TIME. I have represented literally thousands of people:
  • I have been told drugs were planted, the police report is a bunch of lies.
  • Witnesses have told the judge at first appearances that an officer made him or her write a statement or else——their kids would be taken away or some similar a threat.
  • Clients have told me specific officers choose to harass them constantly, stopping them for no reason at all, searching them, interrogating them.
  • Clients have told me that the officer arrested them for “possession” of drugs after the client refused to make drug buys for the police.
  • Clients have been beaten, then accused of resisting arrest with violence so their injuries can be explained by an officer’s need to defend himself.
  • I had a client begin to weep as he told me he received his multiple police dog bite injuries after he was arrested, had his hands cuffed behind him and was being held by the arms by the officers standing beside him—the K-9 handler told him “that keeps the dog sharp”.
  • I was told by a client that he was put into the trunk of a sheriff’s patrol car and driven out to the middle of nowhere near Belle Glade, Florida, an area full of canals and alligators; he was crying and begging for his life, certain he was going to be shot and disposed of out there.
  • A female client wearing a halter dress was arrested; as she was up against the patrol car, the arresting deputy grabbed the straps of her halter dress and SNAPPED them, so that the top of her dress fell to her waist. My client was then put in the back of the patrol car, with her dress bunched up around her waist like a belt because it pushed up on her thighs when she was put in the car. She had ONLY the dress on and no underwear, so she was left virtually nude. She stated that she was in the back of that car for about 45 minutes, while all the deputies on night duty, male and female, came by the location, shining their flashlights into the car on her, laughing at her and making lewd remarks.
  • A client was shot at in Belle Glade by two individuals, bullets striking the home of the family members he was visiting while he dashed to safety,There were children in that home; the deputy who arrived to take the report flatly told them he would not send a detective to investigate it that night; a shirt which had been discarded by one of the shooters was found in the back of the property—the deputy refused to take it as evidence and have it tested for DNA so that a suspect could at least be developed.
The citizens who live in bad neighborhoods are afraid of the police with good reason and have even better reasons to stay quiet: They have absolutely NO POWER against officers who will lie, falsify reports, band together, back each others lies and target people in the community. The people in these communities, as well as my clients, have no respect for officers because they have seen, heard and experienced these things for themselves.

THIS MUST STOP. We have the technology. Every officer should be required to wear a camera. Every patrol car should have a functioning camera. Every interaction with a citizen should be recorded. Then the problem will be the claim that the camera wasn’t working when they want to cover things up but that would still be a great improvement over what happens every single day when a bad cop is on the job.

Even the worst of us deserve better than this. There are good cops out there but there are a lot of bad ones and they can’t be left to their own devices. We know, and now YOU know, what happens when they are.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Sun Mar 01, 2015 3:41 pm
No Surprise wrote:I have been an Assistant Public Defender in Palm Beach County for almost thirty years now. Thought this day would never come.AT LAST! The public hears it from the mouth of a serving officer: THIS. IS. DONE. ALL. THE. TIME. I have represented literally thousands of people:
  • I have been told drugs were planted, the police report is a bunch of lies.
  • Witnesses have told the judge at first appearances that an officer made him or her write a statement or else——their kids would be taken away or some similar a threat.
  • Clients have told me specific officers choose to harass them constantly, stopping them for no reason at all, searching them, interrogating them.
  • Clients have told me that the officer arrested them for “possession” of drugs after the client refused to make drug buys for the police.
  • Clients have been beaten, then accused of resisting arrest with violence so their injuries can be explained by an officer’s need to defend himself.
  • I had a client begin to weep as he told me he received his multiple police dog bite injuries after he was arrested, had his hands cuffed behind him and was being held by the arms by the officers standing beside him—the K-9 handler told him “that keeps the dog sharp”.
  • I was told by a client that he was put into the trunk of a sheriff’s patrol car and driven out to the middle of nowhere near Belle Glade, Florida, an area full of canals and alligators; he was crying and begging for his life, certain he was going to be shot and disposed of out there.
  • A female client wearing a halter dress was arrested; as she was up against the patrol car, the arresting deputy grabbed the straps of her halter dress and SNAPPED them, so that the top of her dress fell to her waist. My client was then put in the back of the patrol car, with her dress bunched up around her waist like a belt because it pushed up on her thighs when she was put in the car. She had ONLY the dress on and no underwear, so she was left virtually nude. She stated that she was in the back of that car for about 45 minutes, while all the deputies on night duty, male and female, came by the location, shining their flashlights into the car on her, laughing at her and making lewd remarks.
  • A client was shot at in Belle Glade by two individuals, bullets striking the home of the family members he was visiting while he dashed to safety,There were children in that home; the deputy who arrived to take the report flatly told them he would not send a detective to investigate it that night; a shirt which had been discarded by one of the shooters was found in the back of the property—the deputy refused to take it as evidence and have it tested for DNA so that a suspect could at least be developed.
The citizens who live in bad neighborhoods are afraid of the police with good reason and have even better reasons to stay quiet: They have absolutely NO POWER against officers who will lie, falsify reports, band together, back each others lies and target people in the community. The people in these communities, as well as my clients, have no respect for officers because they have seen, heard and experienced these things for themselves.

THIS MUST STOP. We have the technology. Every officer should be required to wear a camera. Every patrol car should have a functioning camera. Every interaction with a citizen should be recorded. Then the problem will be the claim that the camera wasn’t working when they want to cover things up but that would still be a great improvement over what happens every single day when a bad cop is on the job.

Even the worst of us deserve better than this. There are good cops out there but there are a lot of bad ones and they can’t be left to their own devices. We know, and now YOU know, what happens when they are.



And after all of these allegations, what did you do? You've described actions that if actually committed by a law enforcement officer, constitute serious federal felonies. Did you contact the WPB Resident FBI Office? File a complaint at http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/investigate/civilrights/color_of_law ? Did you direct the Office of Public Defender Investigators to follow up on these very serious criminal allegations?
publie

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby publie » Sun Mar 01, 2015 8:46 pm
[quote="No Surprise"]I have been an Assistant Public Defender in Palm Beach County for almost thirty years now. Thought this day would never come. AT LAST! The public hears it from the mouth of a serving officer: THIS. IS. DONE. ALL. THE. TIME. I have represented literally thousands of people:
  • I have been told drugs were planted, the police report is a bunch of lies.
  • Witnesses have told the judge at first appearances that an officer made him or her write a statement or else——their kids would be taken away or some similar a threat.
  • Clients have told me specific officers choose to harass them constantly, stopping them for no reason at all, searching them, interrogating them.
  • Clients have told me that the officer arrested them for “possession” of drugs after the client refused to make drug buys for the police.
  • Clients have been beaten, then accused of resisting arrest with violence so their injuries can be explained by an officer’s need to defend himself.
  • I had a client begin to weep as he told me he received his multiple police dog bite injuries after he was arrested, had his hands cuffed behind him and was being held by the arms by the officers standing beside him—the K-9 handler told him “that keeps the dog sharp”.
  • I was told by a client that he was put into the trunk of a sheriff’s patrol car and driven out to the middle of nowhere near Belle Glade, Florida, an area full of canals and alligators; he was crying and begging for his life, certain he was going to be shot and disposed of out there.
  • A female client wearing a halter dress was arrested; as she was up against the patrol car, the arresting deputy grabbed the straps of her halter dress and SNAPPED them, so that the top of her dress fell to her waist. My client was then put in the back of the patrol car, with her dress bunched up around her waist like a belt because it pushed up on her thighs when she was put in the car. She had ONLY the dress on and no underwear, so she was left virtually nude. She stated that she was in the back of that car for about 45 minutes, while all the deputies on night duty, male and female, came by the location, shining their flashlights into the car on her, laughing at her and making lewd remarks.
  • A client was shot at in Belle Glade by two individuals, bullets striking the home of the family members he was visiting while he dashed to safety,There were children in that home; the deputy who arrived to take the report flatly told them he would not send a detective to investigate it that night; a shirt which had been discarded by one of the shooters was found in the back of the property—the deputy refused to take it as evidence and have it tested for DNA so that a suspect could at least be developed.
The citizens who live in bad neighborhoods are afraid of the police with good reason and have even better reasons to stay quiet: They have absolutely NO POWER against officers who will lie, falsify reports, band together, back each others lies and target people in the community. The people in these communities, as well as my clients, have no respect for officers because they have seen, heard and experienced these things for themselves.

THIS MUST STOP. We have the technology. Every officer should be required to wear a camera. Every patrol car should have a functioning camera. Every interaction with a citizen should be recorded. Then the problem will be the claim that the camera wasn’t working when they want to cover things up but that would still be a great improvement over what happens every single day when a bad cop is on the job.

Even the worst of us deserve better than this. There are good cops out there but there are a lot of bad ones and they can’t be left to their own devices. We know, and now YOU know, what happens when they are.[/quBig su


Big Surprise, a liberal scum bag public pretender hates all cops and just knows his scum bag drug dealing clients are all "innocent". You people live in a fucking vacuum and have NO IDEA what goes on in the real world.
Spare Me

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Spare Me » Sun Mar 01, 2015 9:25 pm
Stop crying scumbag. You make up more crap than the law allows. Your clients are scumbags and losers. You choose to believe the BS and then you come on here to whine? LOL..Ok, now my weekend is complete. Why you ask? Because YOUR CLIENTS are the most honest people you will ever know..Life is hard, if youre going to be stupid. :o
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Sun Mar 01, 2015 9:38 pm
D/S wrote:Big Surprise, a liberal scum bag public pretender hates all cops and just knows his scum bag drug dealing clients are all "innocent". You people live in a fucking vacuum and have NO IDEA what goes on in the real world.

yeah I agree! That is why we need to plant evidence because you people always get your clients off. If you focused on the reality of what your clients did instead of making stuff up to get them off, then we wouldn't have to make up charges against them, beat them for confessions or to threaten their families to get them into jail where they belong. The public defender is as much of the problem as the criminal they "defend."
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Mar 02, 2015 1:36 am
Lookie lookie here! A dark green or dark blue LEO 33'ed a black animal in LA. The nigger was unarmed but shit, if they was mother-fucking here they would be finding a gun on that black mother-fucker. Just listen to these fucking monkeys shouting and calling the dead guy a mother-fucker. 'They just shot that mother-fucker! They just shot that mother-fucker and he dead'!

Bunch of fucking animals. If someone shot my unarmed friend and his ass was bleeding out in the street, I wouldn't be calling my dead friend a mother-fucker! Anyways, this is funny shit. I love it when we can pump lead into ghetto trash and the people --- well the people --- they cant do shit about it. Welcome to PBSO bitches! Do exactly what we say or face the consecwenses of your actions!

Okay I'm clikin play now. Where is that mother-fuckin popcorn?

Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Mar 02, 2015 1:46 am
:lol: :lol: :lol: that's funny shit! Hey, when did that trigger h app porch monkey Sgt Savage go to work for LAPD? shooting 2 unarmed men and total incompetence should have landed Savage on Mahogany Row Sheriff a desk with fatty Gauger and dishonestdischarge Bradshaw!
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Mar 02, 2015 3:59 am
I think it's absolutely disgusting to read all these stories. You worthless scumbags that plant evidence and falsify reports deserve to rot in hell. You deserve to be shot between the eyes. Every. One. Of. You. I wanted to be LEO when I grew up, but you obvious bullied-in-school victims that chose to play GOD are the exact reason I carry a guy because you faggots are triggerhappy. You deserve to lose everything you love and cherish.
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Mar 02, 2015 5:36 am
Guest wrote:I think it's absolutely disgusting to read all these stories. You worthless scumbags that plant evidence and falsify reports deserve to rot in hell. You deserve to be shot between the eyes. Every. One. Of. You. I wanted to be LEO when I grew up, but you obvious bullied-in-school victims that chose to play GOD are the exact reason I carry a guy because you faggots are triggerhappy. You deserve to lose everything you love and cherish.

You wanted to be a LEO when you grew up but you are a dismal failure in life. Now you are up at 4 am, dreaming of being a LEO and surfing our message boards before your shift at Dunkin Donuts starts. Get to work flunkie because I'm going to want my free toasted bagel with cream cheese and large coffee after I go 10-08 at D6. Get it through your thick retarded skull: put napkins in the damn bag. Is your menial job so complicated you can't remember to put napkins in the bag? It's really that hard. And you wanted to play cop growing up. Retard. :lol:
D/S NigrBeatr

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby D/S NigrBeatr » Mon Mar 02, 2015 5:48 am
Guest wrote:Okay I'm clikin play now. Where is that mother-fuckin popcorn?


Ah yes, always nice to start off with a video that makes me feel good. Justice was served and LAPD got 1 more mop head off the street. Good job boys!
voice of reason

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby voice of reason » Mon Mar 02, 2015 9:46 am
Before all you cop haters get worked up about this one, you should know they shot him because he grabbed an officer's gun--100% justified shooting.

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-police-fatally-shoot-homeless-man-20150301-story.html#page=2
Guest

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby Guest » Mon Mar 02, 2015 1:10 pm
LMAO SO MANY UNDERCOVER IGNORANT RACISTS THAT POST ON HERE,THE TRUTH OF THE MATTER IS PEOPLE LIKE YOU WILL NEVER
SHOW THEIR REAL FACE CAUSE YOU ARE NOT THAT BOLD OR BRAVE ENOUGH TO SAY WHAT YOUR HEART FEEL TO ANY BODY FACE TO FACE.SO SINCE YOU CAN ONLY BE YOURSELF BEHIND THE KEYBOARD GO SUCK A REAL MAN DICK YOU HERMAPHRODITE BITCH.YOU ARE A COWARD COW WITH NO T BONE JUST A SPINELESS HANDICAPPED SCARECROW.NOW EAT YOUR POPCORN!!!!!!
anonymous anonymous

Re: Tricks of the trade - let's exchange!

Postby anonymous anonymous » Wed Mar 04, 2015 11:07 pm
Another scumbag officer needing investigation, Lawrence Poston, one of the biggest scumbag criminals on the force.
   

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