Skip navigation

Search

498 results
Page 14 of 25. « Previous | 1 2 3 4 ... 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 ... 21 22 23 24 25 | Next »

Jackson v. City of New York, et al., NY, Letter, Excessive Force on Off-Duty Cop, 2019 Case 1:11-cv-03028-PKC-SMG Document 139 Filed 01/02/19 Page 1 of 2 PageID #: 3743 THE CITY OF NEW YORK LAW DEPARTMENT ZACHARY W. CARTER Corporation Counsel BRIAN FRANCOLLA Senior Counsel Phone: (212) 356-3527 Fax: (212) …
Article • December 30, 2018 • from CLN January, 2019
St. Louis Police Department Fighting Prosecution Exclusion List by Kevin Bliss by Kevin Bliss St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner has a list of 28 of the city’s police department officers whose cases her office will no longer accept, citing credibility issues. Already Gardner’s office has refused the prosecution of …
Scottish Psychologist’s Study Focuses On Why the Innocent May Confess to Crimes by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna Dr. Faye Skelton of Napier University in Edinburgh, Scotland, has published a report detailing the tendency of some individuals to confess to crimes they did not commit. She noted that research from …
Article • December 29, 2018 • from CLN January, 2019
New Hampshire’s Secret List of Problematic Cops Gets Worse by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell New Hampshire’s secret list of corrupt and problem cops just got worse. On April 30, Governor Chris Sununu and Attorney General Gordon MacDonald announced that individual cops won’t be placed on the list prior to …
Article • December 29, 2018 • from CLN January, 2019
Eleventh Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity to Florida Cop Who Seized iPhone from Accident Bystander by Christopher Zoukis by Christopher Zoukis The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ruled against a Martin County, Florida, deputy sheriff who seized an iPhone used by a bystander to take pictures and video …
Article • December 28, 2018 • from CLN January, 2019
Illinois: Chicago Police Misconduct Outed in Database 2.0 Version by Edward Lyon by Ed Lyon On August 16, 2018, a new era of transparency in Chicago police misconduct dawned. An updated version of a public database called the Citizens Police Data Project 2.0 (“CPDP”) makes available disciplinary records of Chicago …
Article • December 21, 2018 • from CLN January, 2019
Police Misconduct Threatens Over 20,000 New Jersey Drunk Driving Convictions by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna The New Jersey Supreme Court has issued a report and order that could result in the invalidation of at least 20,667 drunk driving convictions in the state, after a state police officer was charged …
Article • December 5, 2018 • from CLN December, 2018
$384 Million Paid Out by New York City in Last Five Years for Police Misconduct by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna New York City police misconduct continues to cost New York taxpayers a lot of money. In the past five years, New York City has paid out $384 million in …
Article • December 5, 2018 • from CLN December, 2018
Ninth Circuit Rules Detective’s Persistent Questioning After Invocation of Right to Counsel Entitles California Prisoner to Habeas Relief by Richard Resch by Richard Resch The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that a California prisoner convicted of murder is entitled to habeas relief because a detective continued …
Brief • December 4, 2018
Randall v. King County, WA, Settlement, Excesssive Use of Police Force, Motorcyclist, 2018
Article • November 28, 2018 • from CLN December, 2018
Is Blue Privilege at Work in Texas Police Killings? by Betty Nelander by Betty Nelander Demonstrators who protested the police killings of black men in north Texas are crying blue privilege as the officers involved remained free in mid-September. In fact, nine of them who were exercising their First Amendment …
Article • November 20, 2018
Filed under: Police Misconduct, Police
Nearly All the Officers in Charge of an Indiana Police Department Have Been Disciplined — Including the Chief Who Keeps Promoting Them by Ken Armstrong, Christian Sheckler Of the 34 supervisors in the Elkhart, Indiana, Police Department, 28 have been disciplined. Fifteen have been suspended. Seven have been involved in …
Article • November 6, 2018 • from CLN November, 2018
$150,000 Settlement for Man Beaten by West Virginia State Police by For the fourth time in his employment with the West Virginia State Police, Ralph Justus was named as a defendant in a case alleging police brutality. The state agreed to settle out of court for $150,000, making it a …
The Legacy of a Torturer by Joan Parkin Former Chicago police officer Jon Burge tortured black men and got away with it for almost two decades. But his atrocities also spurred a movement — one that scored a major victory against the racist criminal justice system. by Joan Parkin, Jacobin …
Article • October 31, 2018 • from CLN November, 2018
Retaliation a Risk When Video Recording Police Brutality by Kevin Bliss by Kevin Bliss With current technology, filming incidents of police brutality has become more common, yet many of those responsible for capturing events on film claim retaliation by the same police they film. Kevin Moore was filming the day …
Article • October 31, 2018 • from CLN November, 2018
Filed under: Police Misconduct, Police
How to File a Police Complaint by Kevin Bliss by Kevin Bliss The “resist tyranny” website Rons Spot (ronsspot.org) published a detailed report, complete with possible scenarios and advice, on how to file a complaint against a police officer. The article states that a complaint is not a lawsuit; it …
Brief • October 30, 2018
Norfolk Four v. City of Norfolk, VA, Settlement Agreement, Wrongful Conviction, 2018
Article • September 23, 2018 • from CLN October, 2018
Many Sheriffs Tempted by Lack of Oversight or Fiscal Accountability by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke It is a perfect storm of temptation. Many sheriffs in America have little oversight, independent sources of revenue with little fiscal accountability, low salaries, and a lot of power. This leads some of them …
Article • September 23, 2018 • from CLN October, 2018
Filed under: Police Misconduct, Police
Study Indicates Link Between Officer Fatigue and Public Complaints by Betty Nelander by Betty Nelander Nighttime police encounters tend to be more unsettling than those that occur during the day, a new study confirms. Public complaints against cops rise when they work the night shift, a time when they are …
Article • September 23, 2018 • from CLN October, 2018
Filed under: Police Misconduct
Archaic Disciplinary System Allows Chicago Police to Delay Punishment by David Reutter by David Reutter The Chicago Police Department (“CPD”) has endured criticism for officer misconduct. An investigation by ProPublica Illinois and the Chicago Tribune found that the city’s archaic system for disciplining officers allows it to avoid or long …
Page 14 of 25. « Previous | 1 2 3 4 ... 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 ... 21 22 23 24 25 | Next »