SWAT flash-bangs toddler in play pen - the "Baby Bou Bou" saga

:eek: Never expected to see anything come from this.

She's one of the rats but all I'm seeing is a scapegoat.

Can't find if this broad was even present during the baby-burning/maiming...........Just that she was stupid enough to lie and get caught.

The baby-burners are still out there high-fiving eachother for every family they ruin.......:mad:
 
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Wow. I wonder who she pissed off?

In the wife swapping hillbilly dens that are most cops shops, there's no telling.

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Prosecutors said Autry, a 10-year department veteran, gave an affidavit to a Habersham County magistrate judge saying a reliable informant bought drugs from someone standing outside the home the Phonesavanhs were staying in. In the affidavit, Autry told the judge the informant had provided information in the past that led to criminal charges, investigators said.

Prosecutors said the informant was actually "brand new" and it was not him but his roommate — who was not working with the task force that executed the raid — who allegedly bought a small amount of meth, but there was no surveillance to verify the purchase.

Investigators said Autry knew the informant didn't buy drugs from anyone inside the house, the new informant wasn't a proven reliable source, and Autry didn't confirm there was heavy traffic coming and going from the house before she gave the affidavit to the judge who issued the "no-knock" warrant, which was executed roughly two hours later.
 
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Not the officer that threw the incendiary device into a private domicile I see.

The one that blew up the toddler's face and sternum, after all.

Here I thought the bump was going to be an apology from the sheriff's department. One is surely forthcoming now though, I'm sure.
 
Not the officer that threw the incendiary device into a private domicile I see.

The one that blew up the toddler's face and sternum, after all.

Here I thought the bump was going to be an apology from the sheriff's department. One is surely forthcoming now though, I'm sure.

Sorry we blew your kid's face off. Now, move the fuck along.
 
Not the officer that threw the incendiary device into a private domicile I see.

The one that blew up the toddler's face and sternum, after all.

Here I thought the bump was going to be an apology from the sheriff's department. One is surely forthcoming now though, I'm sure.


No, that guy was doing doing his job. It's an unfortunate accident and he's probably going to sue the city in a few years later for this PSTD's he's suffering after it finally gets to him that he blew up a baby's face.
 
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Lame. Seems like a scape goat. Guess she's not part of the "Just-Us" department anymore.
 
Wasn't she the one who ragequit in horror and outrage right after this happened, and right after the Sheriff laughed at Baby Bou Bou?
 
Ex-Georgia deputy sheriff indicted in flash-bang raid that maimed toddler

Ex-Georgia deputy sheriff indicted in flash-bang raid that maimed toddler
By Stephanie Gallman - July 22, 2015

(CNN) A former Habersham County, Georgia, deputy sheriff's false statements to a judge last year set in motion a chain of events that led to the critical injury of a toddler, according to a federal indictment filed Wednesday in district court.

In May 2014, Nikki Autry and a team of special agents and informants from the local Narcotics Criminal Investigation and Suppression Team were "attempting undercover narcotics buys." Autry presented an affidavit to a magistrate judge falsely swearing that a "true and reliable informant" had bought a small amount of methamphetamine at a residence.

No indictments for Georgia SWAT team that burned baby with stun grenade

Based on the erroneous information she presented, which also included claims of "heavy traffic in and out of the residence," the judge issued Autry a "no knock" search warrant.

When a SWAT team executing that warrant found the front door blocked, one of the officers tossed a flash-bang grenade inside the residence. Once inside the home, the SWAT team realized a portable playpen had been blocking the door, and the flash-bang grenade had landed where a 19-month-old was sleeping, eventually exploding on the child's pillow.

The toddler spent weeks in a burn unit in a medically induced coma.

After the 2014 incident, Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell said that had his officers known there were children inside the home, they would have conducted the raid differently.

"We might have gone in through a side door. ... We would not have used a flash-bang," Terrell said.

The federal indictment concludes the raid should not have happened.

"Without her false statements, there was no probable cause to search the premises for drugs or to make the arrests," acting U.S. Attorney John Horn said in a release.

"In this case," he said, "the consequences of the unlawful search were tragic."

According to the indictment, Autry is charged with four counts of civil rights violations for "willfully depriving the occupants of the residence of their right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures."

Autry is also charged with depriving the man suspected of selling drugs, Wanis Thonetheva, of "his right to be free from arrest without probable cause."
...
Autry's attorney said the federal government is ignoring the grand jury's findings and said his client is not to blame for the toddler's injuries.

"[Autry] is being made the lone target for the poorly designed and implemented search and seizure policies of her prior department and a since disbanded drug task force," Jeff Brickman said in a statement.
...
More: http://www.cnn.com/2015/07/22/us/georgia-indictment-flash-bang-case/
 
Wasn't she the one who ragequit in horror and outrage right after this happened, and right after the Sheriff laughed at Baby Bou Bou?

Damn, you got a good memory!

http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/deputy-involved-swat-raid-injured-toddler-resigns/nhd3H/

The written report just says "a deputy" but in the video they say "Nicole Autry".

I can't believe these fuckers. Blame the girl that quit in disgust and file fucking federal charges? She wasn't even there!
 
Ex-deputy to face trial after botched 'no-knock' raid
ATLANTA — A former Habersham County deputy sheriff is set to face trial on charges over her role in setting up a "no-knock" drug raid that severely injured a toddler when a flash grenade detonated in his playpen.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports (http://on-ajc.com/1NPOC5t ) that Nikki Autry is expected to face trial Monday. Autry pleaded not guilty to providing false information to get a warrant, which led to a botched raid that critically injured a toddler.

Authorities have said 19-month-old Bounkham Phonesavanh (BOON'-kahm fohn-SAH'-vahn) was critically injured when the device landed in his playpen during the May 2014 raid on the northeast Georgia home. The grenade blew Phonesavanh's chest and face open, burning him.

Attorney Jeff Brickman says Autry never intentionally misled the judge who signed the no-knock warrant.
http://www.wsbtv.com/news/ap/georgia/ex-deputy-to-face-trial-after-botched-no-knock-rai/npdKZ/
 
They're throwing this stupid cunt under the bus in order to escape punishment themselves.

The DA involved was responsible to vet any information provided prior to petitioning the court for a warrant, he/she must be placed on trial too!

If "the hammer" isn't able to be charged then the carpenter must.

As much as I detest the "Just-Us" system it's all there is right now and if it refuses to place blame where it belongs then that too must be brought to light.....
 
That thing about the good cops calling out the bad cops? That's what happened here. One less good cop.

I have made a career examining running computer systems and identifying defects in them. I have not always been the person to correct those defects, and to tell the truth not every defect I've uncovered has been corrected. But generally, if greater than 2% of our user base is even moderately inconvenienced by one of those systemic defects, then there is at least a good faith effort to correct it.

More often than I would like, I discover defects that have been in place for an incredibly long time. For a defect to exist for more than, say, 3 years is very uncommon. But, if it turns out that this defect has caused measurable losses over that entire time, there is a great deal of effort put forward to correcting it as soon as humanly possible.

I'm pretty sure that all successful companies do likewise.

If I encounter a defect which has been in place for more than 10 years, and I see that there is not going to be any attempt to correct it even though it is causing massive inconvenience, I am forced to think that this is not a defect at all, but rather a feature of the system. I will allow that the original authors didn't really intended that way, but nevertheless, it's a feature.

So when I see a policing system with 180 years of constant bug reports that all say the same thing, it's pretty damned obvious that we are not talking about a defect in the system.
 
What are the relevant addresses? I'll mail a pic a day of their monstrous deed.
 
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