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📌 Wojna na Ukrainie - ostatnia aktualizacja: 26 minut temu
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📌 Powodzie w Polsce - ostatnia aktualizacja: 2024-09-20, 16:24

#policjanci

Protesty w Ottawie
Jesse.Pinkman • 2022-02-23, 15:14
Koniki stratowały protestujących w stolicy Kanady, parlament przegłosował w poniedziałek w sejmie ustawę zezwalającą funkcjonariuszom na bicie i używanie gazu a cała akcja miała miejsce w weekend więc opinia publiczna oceniła działania funkcjonariuszy jako bezprawne.
Najlepszy komentarz (35 piw)
mygyry • 2022-02-23, 17:02
Ponadto kierowcom grożono wiezieniem i odebraniem uprawnień
Grożono wiezieniem również osobom, które dostarczały paliwo i jedzenie strajkującym
Władze zagroziły również blokadą kont bankowych

To mówicie, że w Polsce jest dyktatura, Białoruś, faszyzm itd. Itp.
...do funkcjonariuszy więc musiał przejść terapię ołowiową. Źródło


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Ferguson, Missouri — The St. Louis County Police Department released its critical incident briefing of a December police shooting that left a man dead after he shot at officers. The briefing is related to the Dec. 12 police shooting of Jeremi Moore, a 35-year-old man police said shot at officers. Police were called to the 600 block of Carson Rd. shortly after 8:30 p.m. for a man flourishing a handgun. Officers were searching for Moore and found him around 8:30 p.m. in the 600 block of Tiffin Avenue. Police said the man pulled out a gun and shot at them. One of the officers shot back at the man, killing him. The two Ferguson police officers who were fired upon were not injured. Still, they called for backup and several area departments responded, including the North County Police Cooperative and St. Louis County Police Department. Police said first responders administered aid, but Moore died a short time later. A gun was found about 10 feet from Moore, and a shell casing police said was fired from the gun was found behind the home.
Kiedyś Peter Jackson nakręcił tam Władcę Pierścieni - teraz napierdalają tam pałami. Źródło.

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Nowa Zelandia: Protesty przeciw obostrzeniom. Policja aresztowała ponad 50 osób

Nowozelandzka policja aresztowała ponad 50 osób i rozpoczęła siłowe usuwanie setek protestujących, którzy od trzech dni demonstrują przed budynkiem parlamentu w stolicy Nowej Zelandii, Wellington, przeciwko obostrzeniom i obowiązkowi szczepień na COVID-19.

Protest przed budynkiem nowozelandzkiego parlamentu jest inspirowany demonstracją kierowców ciężarówek w Kanadzie, gdzie sformowali oni tzw. Konwój wolności, który od ponad tygodnia blokuje ulice Ottawy. W ostatnich dniach kierowcy w Kanadzie zaczęli blokować również przejścia graniczne między Kanadą a USA. Uczestnicy kanadyjskiego "Konwoju wolności" domagają się przede wszystkim rezygnacji z obowiązku szczepień na COVID-19 kierowców, którzy regularnie przekraczają granicę z USA.

W Wellington kilka tysięcy osób zablokowało ulice wokół parlamentu ciężarówkami, samochodami osobowymi i motocyklami.

W Nowej Zelandii zaszczepionych przeciw COVID-19 jest ok. 94 proc. osób dopuszczonych do programu szczepień. Szczepienia są obowiązkowe dla niektórych grup zawodowych.

W liczącym ponad 5 mln mieszkańców kraju od początku epidemii wykryto ponad 18 tys. zakażeń koronawirusem. Zmarło 53 chorych na COVID-19.

Nowozelandzka premier, Jacinda Ardern stwierdziła, że protestujący przed parlamentem "nie są odzwierciedleniem tego, co czuje większość Nowozelandczyków".

Mimo prób zakończenia protestu przez policję jeszcze o 14:45 czasu lokalnego ok. tysiąca protestujących pozostawało przed parlamentem.

Ardern podkreśliła, że każdy obywatel kraju ma prawo do protestu, ale - jak dodała - protesty nie powinny zakłócać życia innych ludzi. - Usunięcie protestujących to sprawa operacyjna dla policji - dodała premier.

W czwartek doszło do starcia demonstrantów z policją. Napierający na barierki wokół parlamentu tłum miał obrzucić policjantów m.in. pustymi plastikowymi butelkami. Kilkadziesiąt osób zostało zakutych w kajdanki i zabranych przez policję.

Wielu protestujących podkreślało, że są zaszczepieni przeciw COVID-19, ale sprzeciwiają się obowiązkowi szczepień. Uczestnicy demonstracji trzymali tabliczki z hasłami "Wolność", "Zostawcie nasze dzieci w spokoju" i "Dajcie mi pracować".

- Chcemy powrotu naszej wolności - mówił jeden z protestujących, cytowany przez Reutersa. - Jacinda odwróciła się od nas. Kiwi (potoczne określenie Nowozelandczyków - red.) nie są głupi. Tracimy pracę i życie przez te obowiązki i obostrzenia - dodał.
Najlepszy komentarz (43 piw)
sberek38 • 2022-02-11, 15:32
Michałeczek napisał/a:

Hehe, aż miło patrzeć


Jesteś mentalnym niewolonikiem systemu. masz wyprany mózg przez media (ewentualnie jesteś psem wykonującym rozkazy). Dla ciebi i nie liczy sie wolność, ty będziesz zawsze posłusznie wypełniał polecania, które puszczą ci na pasku w TV.
Według źródła 22-letni Amir Locke trzymał w ręku pistolet w momencie wejścia funkcjonariuszy. Źródło.

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Minneapolis Suspends No-Knock Warrants After Police Killing

Amir Locke, 22, was fatally shot as the police carried out a search warrant. He was lying under a blanket until an officer kicked the couch, revealing a gun, body camera video shows.

Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis on Friday announced a moratorium on no-knock warrants one day after the Police Department released body camera footage of its SWAT team fatally shooting a man who was lying on a couch under a blanket during an early-morning raid.

The man who was killed, Amir Locke, 22, had a gun in his hand, but it is unclear whether he was aware that police officers had entered the apartment shortly before 7 a.m.

Keith Ellison, the attorney general of Minnesota, who led the prosecutions of former police officers in the killings of George Floyd and Daunte Wright, said his office would join a review of the police shooting. The mayor said no-knock warrants could not be requested or conducted while the city evaluated its current policy.

The graphic and brief video released by the Police Department on Thursday night shows the encounter from Wednesday morning, when its SWAT team had been carrying out a warrant for the Saint Paul Police Department’s homicide unit.

In the video, an officer is seen quietly turning a key in the apartment door before officers file in and begin to yell.

“Police! Search warrant!” several officers are heard shouting.

“Hands, hands!” one officer says.

“Get on the ground!” another yells.

One officer kicked the back of the couch, jarring Mr. Locke and making a gun visible. The police fired at least three times in response.

The entire encounter took less than 10 seconds.

In a news release published the day of the shooting, the Police Department said officers had performed emergency aid on Mr. Locke, who died at a nearby hospital.

“I’m under no illusion that processing this video will be easy,” Amelia Huffman, the city’s interim police chief, said at a news conference on Thursday. “It won’t be. It shouldn’t be. These are wrenching videos to watch. They’re painful, but it’s necessary.”

Chief Huffman said that officers had a warrant for three locations in the apartment complex, and that Mr. Locke was not named in the original warrant.

Mr. Ellison, the state attorney general, said on Friday that his office would partner with the Hennepin County attorney’s office to review the shooting.

“Amir Locke’s life mattered,” Mr. Ellison said in a statement, promising the Locke family “a fair and thorough review.”

Mr. Ellison led the prosecution of Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapolis police officer who pleaded guilty to federal crimes for the killing of Mr. Floyd, and Kimberly Potter, a former Minnesota police officer who was convicted of manslaughter in the death of Mr. Wright.

The Minneapolis Police Department said in a statement that one officer fired shots at Mr. Locke, and it released the personnel file of Officer Mark Hanneman.

Ben Crump, a lawyer representing Mr. Locke’s family, compared the shooting of Mr. Locke, who was Black, to the killing of Breonna Taylor, a Black medical worker who was fatally shot by Louisville police officers in March 2020 during a botched raid on her apartment.

“If we learned anything from Breonna Taylor it is that no-knock warrants have deadly consequences for innocent, law-abiding Black citizens,” Mr. Crump said at a news conference on Friday.

No-knock warrants allow the police to enter property without first announcing their presence and are primarily used when there is concern that evidence will be destroyed or officers will be put in danger.

Tony Romanucci, another lawyer representing Mr. Locke’s family, said Mr. Locke had “no idea” who was in his apartment. “Had they announced who they were and why they were there, this tragedy could have been averted,” Mr. Romanucci said.

Mayor Frey said in a statement on Friday that no-knock warrants would not be allowed while the city reviewed its policy with experts who helped create “Breonna’s Law,” an ordinance passed after Ms. Taylor’s death that bans no-knock warrants in Louisville.

During the moratorium, which the mayor said was “to ensure safety of both the public and officers,” the police must knock, announce their presence and wait a reasonable amount of time before entering with a warrant.

Mr. Locke’s father, Andre Locke, said at the news conference that his son was the third oldest of eight siblings. He said his son had been working for the food delivery service DoorDash and was “a week away” from moving to Dallas, where his mother, Karen Wells, lives. Andre Locke said that several of his cousins worked in law enforcement and that one of them was a mentor to Amir.

“It was hurtful, it hurt deep to see my son executed, to see our son executed,” Mr. Locke said. “But the part that struck me the most was that he never got a chance to see or to know who killed him.”

Ms. Wells said she and her son would frequently talk on the FaceTime app when they were apart.

“I am going to miss just being able to see my son grow into a man, that’s what I am going to miss,” Ms. Wells said. “I am going to miss the fact that he didn’t, he won’t even get the chance to become a father and give us grandchildren.”

The Minneapolis Police Department has been under scrutiny since Officer Chauvin held his knee on Mr. Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes during an arrest in May 2020.

Mr. Floyd’s death generated widespread outrage, and protests across the country that summer called for social justice and police reform. An attempt to change policing in Minneapolis failed in November, when 56 percent of voters rejected a ballot measure that would have replaced the city’s Police Department with a public safety agency.

The release of the footage of Mr. Locke’s death came more quickly than in past cases, and after pressure from Representative Ilhan Omar and state officials.

Ten members of the Minneapolis delegation of the State House of Representatives had called for the footage to be released immediately in a letter to Mayor Frey and Chief Huffman.

“Minneapolis has a long path before us in establishing a trusting, effective and professional relationship between its Police Department and community,” the representatives wrote.
Najlepszy komentarz (37 piw)
kooloo • 2022-02-08, 16:08
zadego ostrzezenia ze wchodza , gosc mogl pomyslec ze zlodziej i siega po klamke , o co chodzi tam juz egzekucje domowe wykonuja czy jak ?
Według źródła geniusz przeżył. Źródło i link do całości.

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Fresno police released video Friday from officer-worn cameras from the night a man tried to commit “suicide by cop,” according to police. The 26-year-old man identified as Ryan Brooks was critically wounded in the shooting about 10:30 p.m. Dec. 22, according to police. Officers shot Brooks outside Fort Washington Fitness, where the call appeared to originate, at the shopping center near North Friant Road and Fort Washington Avenue in northeast Fresno. The video shows the officers fire more than a dozen rounds, and continue to fire after Brooks went to the ground. Police say he was still a threat as he was seated. Lt. Bill Dooley said Friday that the officers involved have not been named but returned to work after a routine paid leave of absence related to the shooting.

He told The Bee that police would not say Friday how many rounds were fired or how long either officer has been with the department. Dooley said the video includes all of the information that investigators are ready to release and nothing further was available Friday to protect the investigation. “An officer-involved investigation is a thorough investigation,” he said.

It only came to light later, according to police, that Brooks himself made the 911 call that brought officers to the scene, where they found him driving erratically in the parking lot before stopping in a dirt field on the southwest corner nearest to Woodward Park. “I’m at Fort Washington Fitness,” he says on the 911 call. “There’s someone driving around saying they’re going to start shooting people.”

The newly released video also shows an officer speaking to Brooks over the phone as the officer is on his way to the scene, but Brooks does not admit to the intentions police have said he had. Police have said Brooks was trying to draw the attention of officers, and, when they stopped him, acted suspiciously with his hand in his pocket. He pulled what appeared to be a gun from his pocket and took a “shooter’s stance,” police said, before he was shot by two officers. Officers can be heard in the video repeatedly telling Brooks to take his hand out of his pocket, and saying “I’m going to shoot you” at least once. Brooks had his right hand in his pocket and his left arm was straight at his side, video shows, before pulling his hand out quickly. He was holding a green plastic toy gun in an effort to commit “suicide by cop,” Deputy Chief Burke Farrah said on the night of the shooting by police.

Upon reviewing the video, the community advocacy organization “Fresno Building Healthy Communities” demanded police reform and action to be taken by the City of Fresno and the Fresno Police Department. The organization characterized the police shooting of more than a dozen rounds as “recklessly fired” and said the community’s safety was put at risk. “This latest case involving Mr. Brooks further demonstrates that the Fresno Police Department is not equipped to respond to mental health calls,” the organization said in a news release. “We cannot allow this violent behavior to continue. Fresnans are still demanding real reform. It is unacceptable to continue to pay for a public safety system that is not safe at all.”

Attempts by The Bee to reach Brooks were unsuccessful. He has been released from Community Regional Medical Center, according to a hospital spokesperson. Brooks faces possible criminal charges for resisting police and brandishing an imitation firearm, both misdemeanors, police have said. The Fresno County District Attorney’s Office has not received reports from investigators that would allow prosecutors to decide whether to charge Brooks, according to Assistant District Attorney Jerry Stanley, a spokesperson for the district attorney’s office. Brooks has not been charged as of Friday.