An archive of articles about abuses by security agencies, updates about the civil rights movement.
Friday, June 15, 2012
Copwatch Collectives
Vallejo Copwatch
[vallejocopwatch.blogspot.com]
Police Accountability Clinic and Helpline
[Pachline.org]
WeCopwatch
[wecopwatch.org]
Purple Berets
[purpleberets.org]
[707-887-0262]
[info@purpleberets.org]
Purple Berets • PO Box 14720 • Santa Rosa, CA 95402
Berkeley Copwatch
meets at Grassroots House, 2022 Blake st. Berkeley CA 94704
[berkeleycopwatch.org/blog]
Oakland Copwatch
PO Box 72444, Oakland CA 94612
[Oaklandcopwatch.com]
[oaklandcopwatch@gmail.com]
[510-548-0425]
San Francisco Copwatch
c/o Bayview Newspaper []
contact through Berkeley Copwatch [berkeleycopwatch.org/blog]
San Jose Copwatch
[sanjosecopwatch.org]
Bay Area Copwatch
Note: website offline as of 2012-04 [bay-area-copwatch.police-misconduct.org]
Penninsula Copwatch
[www.peninsulacopwatch.org]
Sacramento Copwatch
[saccopwatch.wordpress.com]
Redwood Curtain Copwatch
[redwoodcurtaincopwatch.net]
The Surveillance State
Street Cameras in Vallejo California
ABC7 News, 2011-07
[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itF_UodSthA]
Surveillance State is not about crime prevention
[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5Vix2jA0Y8]
Published on May 1, 2012 by only2percent
The statistics do not show any deterrent effect of video surveillance on crime rates. It's more about virtual imprisonment, eavesdropping and electronic harassment of the public.
***
Published and described on Mar 5, 2012 by AlanWattResistance
"Charles Farrier discusses the creeping surveillance state and brings up some pertinent facts regarding the crime statistics and their embellishment by political and police service actors. A succinct and informative presentation delivered with ironic humor, when appropriate.
"The UK is the most spied upon nation in the world - why doesn't it have the lowest crime rate?
"Whatever happened to the UK's common law value of 'innocent until proven guilty'?
"Research shows that CCTV simply does not work, so isn't it just a huge waste of money?
"Why do the media, police and government portray CCTV as an effective tool?
"Why has there been no public debate?" - 'No CCTV' Website
Filmed at the 3rd 'Lawful Rebellion' conference, The British Constitution Group, London 31st of October 2009 by BBC5tv [http://www.bbc5.tv/]
Street Cameras in Vallejo California
ABC7 News, 2011-07
[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itF_UodSthA]
Surveillance State is not about crime prevention
[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5Vix2jA0Y8]
Published on May 1, 2012 by only2percent
The statistics do not show any deterrent effect of video surveillance on crime rates. It's more about virtual imprisonment, eavesdropping and electronic harassment of the public.
***
Published and described on Mar 5, 2012 by AlanWattResistance
"Charles Farrier discusses the creeping surveillance state and brings up some pertinent facts regarding the crime statistics and their embellishment by political and police service actors. A succinct and informative presentation delivered with ironic humor, when appropriate.
"The UK is the most spied upon nation in the world - why doesn't it have the lowest crime rate?
"Whatever happened to the UK's common law value of 'innocent until proven guilty'?
"Research shows that CCTV simply does not work, so isn't it just a huge waste of money?
"Why do the media, police and government portray CCTV as an effective tool?
"Why has there been no public debate?" - 'No CCTV' Website
Filmed at the 3rd 'Lawful Rebellion' conference, The British Constitution Group, London 31st of October 2009 by BBC5tv [http://www.bbc5.tv/]
TO ANYONE WHO THINKS SOME COPS ARE GOOD
[http://beatyourselfup.com/post/14233514064/cops-are-not-good], originally posted at [http://www.injusticeeverywhere.com/]
“When we are dealing with the police as an institutional structure, we are not dealing with a group of individuals acting on their own personal feelings and judgements, but rather, with a group of functionaries who have, as part of the terms of their jobs, agreed to set their personal opinions and feelings aside and instead act as obedient agents of the state… Thus, if we are referring to “the police” as an institution, rather than the personal feelings of individual police, no, they are not “part of the 99%”, they are the enforcers of the 1%’s power.” — David Graeber, PHD Professor of Anthropology
Would you say that Nazi soldiers were all corrupt? I would. Were there individual Nazi soldiers who were good people that were probably just led astray? Probably. But we would still say that Nazi soldiers were corrupt, wouldn’t we? Yes, I think so.
The same logic is applied to American police in their current form. No one cares if there are good individual police. The institution, as a whole, is corrupt. That’s the point. This “there are some good cops” rhetoric attempts to deny this by pointing out irrelevant opinions about individual officers.
“According to the 3rd Quarter Report of The National Police Misconduct Statistics and Reporting Project, police officers were accused of sexual assault at a rate of 79 per 100,000 law enforcement personal. The rate of accusations for the general public is 28.7 per 100,000 general public. When corrected for gender these numbers tell us that there are 1.5 times more accusations of sexual assault among male law enforcement officers than among the general male population. The fact that rapists seem to be concentrated among a group of armed individuals who have the purported authority to detain and arrest other individuals should be more than a little alarming for even the most prolific police bootlicker.”
“As you can see, when we examine violent crime statistics, law enforcement officers appear to be involved in violent crime in a comparable rate with the general population. 432 officers out of every 100,000 compared to 454.5 people out of every 100,000. So, roughly 0.43% vs 0.45%.
Both seem like small numbers, don’t they? Yet most people would probably tell you that they are worried about the rate of violent crimes… but not police misconduct even though both occur at similar rates statistically.
If you’re wondering about the homicide rates, “Homicide Charged” compares the number of alleged homicides in general population with the number of police officers actually charged with homicide or murder. The “Homicide” number compares the same general population statistic with the number of officers involved in questionable non-vehicular homicide deaths including deaths in custody as a result of excessive force that were not charged as homicides.”
“The statistic for sexual assaults is the stunner for us though. 29.3 per 100,000 in the general population vs 73.3 per 100,000 for law enforcement officers. That would seem to catch people’s attention as a problem, but apparently it doesn’t.
So, you see, it’s all a matter of context. Sure, .073% is a small percentage of the population of police officers in the US, but that number represents 522 officers per year and is a larger, by over 2x, ratio of the population of police than are the number of alleged sexual assailants in the US general population at .029%.
So, the next time you find yourself challenged by a law enforcement officer who says that police misconduct isn’t a problem because it only represents a small percentage of the number of police officers in the US. Remember that it really does represent a small percentage but so does crime in the general population but that doesn’t stop people from worrying so much about it that they’ll spend a majority of their tax dollars to fight it.”
“When current data is filtered to examine only incidents that can be classified as violent crimes as specified per the US FBI/DOJ Uniform Crime Reporting standards and then compared with the 2009 FBI/DOJ UCR Crime in the United States report as a per capita general population and per capita law enforcement basis the results indicate that overall violent crime rates are not too divergent between the two population groups with a difference of only 20.1 per 100k point between the two. However, there appear to be some more significant differences at a more granular level with robbery rates for police far below those reported for the general population but sexual assault rates are significantly higher for police when compared to the general population.”
“While the rate of police officers officially charged with murder is only 1.06% higher than the current general population murder rate, if excessive force complaints involving fatalities were prosecuted as murder the murder rate for law enforcement officers would exceed the general population murder rate by 472%.”
But most cops are good right? It’s just “a few that spoil the bunch.”
In today’s American society, if you don’t suggest this propaganda at the end of any comment regarding police brutality, you’re labeled as anti-police, or perhaps a conspiracy theorist.
I just want to set the record straight: I am not anti-police. I am anti to the current form of law enforcement we have today. For far too long I have believed that the police have the ability to “adjust” the law, to serve it in any form they see fit. And what bothers me most is the fact that when one police officer does wrong, there are VERY few officers who will stand up for what it is right and come forward about the abuses perpetrated by their fellow officers. A lot of officers would say they wouldn’t rat on their “brother”. But in my opinion, this makes those officers complicit and equally responsible under the law as an accomplice.
So the next time you see a video of 12 cops, 5 of which are beating the shit out of a suspect, don’t just castrate the 5 cops who are clearly to blame. Ask yourself: What about the other 7? Why didn’t they come forward? Why weren’t those cops stopping the others? THEN… tell me it’s just a spoiled few in the bunch.
And just for good measure:
[http://beatyourselfup.com/post/14233514064/cops-are-not-good], originally posted at [http://www.injusticeeverywhere.com/]
“When we are dealing with the police as an institutional structure, we are not dealing with a group of individuals acting on their own personal feelings and judgements, but rather, with a group of functionaries who have, as part of the terms of their jobs, agreed to set their personal opinions and feelings aside and instead act as obedient agents of the state… Thus, if we are referring to “the police” as an institution, rather than the personal feelings of individual police, no, they are not “part of the 99%”, they are the enforcers of the 1%’s power.” — David Graeber, PHD Professor of Anthropology
Would you say that Nazi soldiers were all corrupt? I would. Were there individual Nazi soldiers who were good people that were probably just led astray? Probably. But we would still say that Nazi soldiers were corrupt, wouldn’t we? Yes, I think so.
The same logic is applied to American police in their current form. No one cares if there are good individual police. The institution, as a whole, is corrupt. That’s the point. This “there are some good cops” rhetoric attempts to deny this by pointing out irrelevant opinions about individual officers.
“According to the 3rd Quarter Report of The National Police Misconduct Statistics and Reporting Project, police officers were accused of sexual assault at a rate of 79 per 100,000 law enforcement personal. The rate of accusations for the general public is 28.7 per 100,000 general public. When corrected for gender these numbers tell us that there are 1.5 times more accusations of sexual assault among male law enforcement officers than among the general male population. The fact that rapists seem to be concentrated among a group of armed individuals who have the purported authority to detain and arrest other individuals should be more than a little alarming for even the most prolific police bootlicker.”
“As you can see, when we examine violent crime statistics, law enforcement officers appear to be involved in violent crime in a comparable rate with the general population. 432 officers out of every 100,000 compared to 454.5 people out of every 100,000. So, roughly 0.43% vs 0.45%.
Both seem like small numbers, don’t they? Yet most people would probably tell you that they are worried about the rate of violent crimes… but not police misconduct even though both occur at similar rates statistically.
If you’re wondering about the homicide rates, “Homicide Charged” compares the number of alleged homicides in general population with the number of police officers actually charged with homicide or murder. The “Homicide” number compares the same general population statistic with the number of officers involved in questionable non-vehicular homicide deaths including deaths in custody as a result of excessive force that were not charged as homicides.”
“The statistic for sexual assaults is the stunner for us though. 29.3 per 100,000 in the general population vs 73.3 per 100,000 for law enforcement officers. That would seem to catch people’s attention as a problem, but apparently it doesn’t.
So, you see, it’s all a matter of context. Sure, .073% is a small percentage of the population of police officers in the US, but that number represents 522 officers per year and is a larger, by over 2x, ratio of the population of police than are the number of alleged sexual assailants in the US general population at .029%.
So, the next time you find yourself challenged by a law enforcement officer who says that police misconduct isn’t a problem because it only represents a small percentage of the number of police officers in the US. Remember that it really does represent a small percentage but so does crime in the general population but that doesn’t stop people from worrying so much about it that they’ll spend a majority of their tax dollars to fight it.”
“When current data is filtered to examine only incidents that can be classified as violent crimes as specified per the US FBI/DOJ Uniform Crime Reporting standards and then compared with the 2009 FBI/DOJ UCR Crime in the United States report as a per capita general population and per capita law enforcement basis the results indicate that overall violent crime rates are not too divergent between the two population groups with a difference of only 20.1 per 100k point between the two. However, there appear to be some more significant differences at a more granular level with robbery rates for police far below those reported for the general population but sexual assault rates are significantly higher for police when compared to the general population.”
“While the rate of police officers officially charged with murder is only 1.06% higher than the current general population murder rate, if excessive force complaints involving fatalities were prosecuted as murder the murder rate for law enforcement officers would exceed the general population murder rate by 472%.”
But most cops are good right? It’s just “a few that spoil the bunch.”
In today’s American society, if you don’t suggest this propaganda at the end of any comment regarding police brutality, you’re labeled as anti-police, or perhaps a conspiracy theorist.
I just want to set the record straight: I am not anti-police. I am anti to the current form of law enforcement we have today. For far too long I have believed that the police have the ability to “adjust” the law, to serve it in any form they see fit. And what bothers me most is the fact that when one police officer does wrong, there are VERY few officers who will stand up for what it is right and come forward about the abuses perpetrated by their fellow officers. A lot of officers would say they wouldn’t rat on their “brother”. But in my opinion, this makes those officers complicit and equally responsible under the law as an accomplice.
So the next time you see a video of 12 cops, 5 of which are beating the shit out of a suspect, don’t just castrate the 5 cops who are clearly to blame. Ask yourself: What about the other 7? Why didn’t they come forward? Why weren’t those cops stopping the others? THEN… tell me it’s just a spoiled few in the bunch.
And just for good measure:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)