The prisoner, who is currently in jail, was separated from Gray by a metal partition and could not see him. His statement is contained in an application for a search warrant, which is sealed by the court. The Post was given the document under the condition that the prisoner not be named because the person who provided it feared for the inmate’s safety.
The document, written by a Baltimore police investigator, offers the first glimpse of what might have happened inside the van. It is not clear whether any additional evidence backs up the prisoner’s version, which is just one piece of a much larger probe.
Police have mentioned only two prisoners in the van.
The van driver stopped three times while transporting Gray to a booking center, the first to put him in leg irons. Batts said the officer driving the van described Gray as “irate.” The search warrant application says Gray “continued to be combative in the police wagon.”
The driver made a second stop, five minutes later, and asked an officer to help check on Gray. At that stop, police have said the van driver found Gray on the floor of the van and put him back on the seat, still without restraints. Police said Gray asked for medical help at that point.
The third stop was to put the other prisoner — a 38-year-old man accused of violating a protective order — into the van. The van was then driven six blocks to the Western District station. Gray was taken from there to a hospital, where he died April 19.
I hadn't seen that before, but here's an article from the Baltimore Sun. Freddie and his twin sister had lead poisoning as children from the house they grew up in and it appears that some court case related to that was misconstrued as being a car accident by the 'Free Republic' -- which has since removed the story.
"Rough riding". Toss somebody into the back of the van and drive in such a manner the person is tossed around inside the van. Not the firs time either. Police admitted that he did not even have a seat belt on. They took their time in getting to their destination too- making other stops before checking on their prisoner in the back.
Paddy wagon's dont have seat belts in the back. Usually there are two benches running parallel to the walls of the van, with a wall in between to separate men and women.
As far as making other stops along the way... the entire purpose of using a paddy wagon is to pick up several prisoners and then then take them to jail all at once, which is a more efficient use of manpower.
The management of the police department is largely black. Wouldn't it just be easier to out the six and then ride in on the white horse as heroes of the community? In cases of governmental scandals, a lot of times the feds will sacrifice a mid level management type so as to show the public they are doing something proactive. If it's between the perceived integrity of the Baltimore Police Department and six measly cops, I'm giving the public the cops if I'm the kingmaker over there.
Take this shit to the cop sites dude. Your bosses created these urban plantations that your ilk harvest for your paychecks FFS. Don't act like every damn cop doesn't know what they are getting into. Go be a dentist you non-hacking whiner.
Couldn't someone translate that chunk of babble for me?
Couldn't someone translate that chunk of babble for me?
Those Baltimore cops really can do some amazing stuff. They made my video camera disappear some years back, right in the middle of recording them. If they can pull that off, then they would certainly seem to be capable of having someone break their own spine.
Cops kidnap and imprison innocent people for non-violent activities such as possessing plants and various plant materials. That is inherently immoral. If you are arrested for having marijuana, it would be totally justifiable to protect your own person and property by using whatever means necessary to defend yourself. Now, I don't recommend actually doing that because you will get killed, but defending yourself or your property against an attacker is not immoral. The cops are engaged in immoral actions on a daily basis and you have to have a certain mindset to get into it in the first place. It's the same mindset that allowed the Holocaust to happen. It's an appeal to authority, unabashed support of the Rule of Law, even if the law is wrong. It's not a healthy mindset.
Rand was right when he talked about how police have a difficult job because they have to uphold drug laws, if they took that away it would allow the cops to focus on real criminals and actually have a reasonable job where they aren't attacking innocent people on a daily basis.
The war on drugs is what has created the drug problems in our country, and all of the problems in Baltimore we see today is a result of that. It's a totally predictable result.
The war on drugs beefs up the police state, they get more funding when they make more drug convictions. They sell their property and keep the proceeds. It's just a really bad situation.
I guess it's no conspiracy that they look for the sub-100 IQ types.
OK, and what does that have to do with anything I said? Also, I don't understand what the obsession here is with pot, in my town the cops don't even bother with pot, despite what many of you think most cops don't get up every day saying "I can't wait to go get me some pot heads", pretty much every cop I know would like pot to be legal, they hate wasting their time on it.
OK, and what does that have to do with anything I said? Also, I don't understand what the obsession here is with pot, in my town the cops don't even bother with pot, despite what many of you think most cops don't get up every day saying "I can't wait to go get me some pot heads", pretty much every cop I know would like pot to be legal, they hate wasting their time on it.
OK, and what does that have to do with anything I said? Also, I don't understand what the obsession here is with pot, in my town the cops don't even bother with pot, despite what many of you think most cops don't get up every day saying "I can't wait to go get me some pot heads", pretty much every cop I know would like pot to be legal, they hate wasting their time on it.
that '12' after his fake name...?...age?...dick size?....FEMA camp?....new TV show called 12?...the 12 project?...a 12 IQ seems low..but ya never know. Ricther/Richter scale?...that must be it...Richter scale... as in 12 earthquake...
OK, and what does that have to do with anything I said? Also, I don't understand what the obsession here is with pot, in my town the cops don't even bother with pot, despite what many of you think most cops don't get up every day saying "I can't wait to go get me some pot heads", pretty much every cop I know would like pot to be legal, they hate wasting their time on it.
What size town do you live in?
Adam 12? 12th sock puppet account? 12th precinct? Badge number?
What size town do you live in?