BallSacBounce wrote:Fat Kat wrote:
Bad cops suck. As a society we are forced to put a lot of trust in them so when they violate it I get angry.
We'll allow to bust that union and you can knock yourselves out. Have a blast!
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BallSacBounce wrote:Fat Kat wrote:
Bad cops suck. As a society we are forced to put a lot of trust in them so when they violate it I get angry.
Fat Kat wrote:
The NYPD Can See Millions Of Arrest Records That Were Supposed To Be Sealed
The New York City Police Department digitally warehoused more than 6.9 million sealed arrest records, new documents exclusively obtained by HuffPost show.
By Mike Hayes
07/27/2020 05:45 AM ET
Updated 2 hours ago
For over 40 years, it has been illegal for police in New York state to access a person’s sealed arrest records. Details of arrests of people who were charged but not convicted or whose cases were dismissed ― as well as juveniles or people who completed drug treatment programs or committed noncriminal offenses ― aren’t supposed to influence law enforcement in any way should police encounter those people again.
But new court documents obtained by HuffPost show that the New York City Police Department has been breaking that law for years, on a massive scale that has been previously unreported.
According to the documents, the NYPD has digitally warehoused more than 6.9 million sealed arrest records of more than 3.5 million New Yorkers. Worse, every cop on the street has instant access to those records through their smartphones.
The court documents are part of a 2018 class-action lawsuit against the NYPD. That lawsuit alleges the police department has violated the state law, which is supposed to protect people from being harassed by police based strictly on past interactions — a matter that primarily affects Black people and other people of color.
The revelations are particularly explosive and damaging for the NYPD in light of the anti-racist protests that have occurred nationwide following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
Instead of destroying or returning arrest records to the accused if a case is terminated in their favor, as is required by law, the NYPD admitted it has kept millions of them. The filing revealed that sealed records are housed inside the department’s Domain Awareness System, or DAS, a vast system of databases developed by the police department and Microsoft that is installed on each officer’s phone for easy access.
-more-
HarthorneWingo wrote:Here’s a bombshell report. This is fascism at its finest and all parties who knew about this should be in serious legal trouble.
https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_5f1add79c5b6296fbf417b71The NYPD Can See Millions Of Arrest Records That Were Supposed To Be Sealed
The New York City Police Department digitally warehoused more than 6.9 million sealed arrest records, new documents exclusively obtained by HuffPost show.
By Mike Hayes
07/27/2020 05:45 AM ET
Updated 2 hours ago
For over 40 years, it has been illegal for police in New York state to access a person’s sealed arrest records. Details of arrests of people who were charged but not convicted or whose cases were dismissed ― as well as juveniles or people who completed drug treatment programs or committed noncriminal offenses ― aren’t supposed to influence law enforcement in any way should police encounter those people again.
But new court documents obtained by HuffPost show that the New York City Police Department has been breaking that law for years, on a massive scale that has been previously unreported.
According to the documents, the NYPD has digitally warehoused more than 6.9 million sealed arrest records of more than 3.5 million New Yorkers. Worse, every cop on the street has instant access to those records through their smartphones.
The court documents are part of a 2018 class-action lawsuit against the NYPD. That lawsuit alleges the police department has violated the state law, which is supposed to protect people from being harassed by police based strictly on past interactions — a matter that primarily affects Black people and other people of color.
The revelations are particularly explosive and damaging for the NYPD in light of the anti-racist protests that have occurred nationwide following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
Instead of destroying or returning arrest records to the accused if a case is terminated in their favor, as is required by law, the NYPD admitted it has kept millions of them. The filing revealed that sealed records are housed inside the department’s Domain Awareness System, or DAS, a vast system of databases developed by the police department and Microsoft that is installed on each officer’s phone for easy access.
-more-
HarthorneWingo wrote:
Yeah, "rocks and bottles" Lying POSs
Spot31 wrote:HarthorneWingo wrote:
Yeah, "rocks and bottles" Lying POSs
Assault in the second degree is a serious charge
Fat Kat wrote:
Fat Kat wrote:
Fat Kat wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:Fat Kat wrote:
Police were warning that these white supremacist groups were infiltrating the protests? Warning who exactly? Please. Police officers are already in these groups. I wouldn't be shocked if we later learned that there was prior knowledge and/or coordination.