Anti-police protests https://truthvoice.com Wed, 22 May 2019 11:34:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.3 https://i0.wp.com/truthvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-truthvoice-logo21-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Anti-police protests https://truthvoice.com 32 32 194740597 Partnership Between Facebook And Cops Could Make Planning Protests Impossible https://truthvoice.com/2015/11/partnership-between-facebook-and-cops-could-make-planning-protests-impossible/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=partnership-between-facebook-and-cops-could-make-planning-protests-impossible Mon, 02 Nov 2015 09:38:26 +0000 http://truthvoice.com/2015/11/partnership-between-facebook-and-cops-could-make-planning-protests-impossible/
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A partnership between police departments and social media sites discussed at a convention in Philadelphia this week could allow law enforcement to keep anything deemed criminal off the Internet—and even stop people from organizing protests.

A high-ranking official from the Chicago Police Department told attendees at a law enforcement conference on Monday that his agency has been working with a security chief at Facebook to block certain users from the site “if it is determined they have posted what is deemed criminal content,” reportsKenneth Lipp, an independent journalist who attended the lecture.

Lipp reported throughout the week from the International Association of Chiefs of Police conference, and now says that a speaker during one of the presentations suggested that a relationship exists between law enforcement and social media that that could be considered a form of censorship.

According to Lipp, the unnamed CPD officer said specifically that his agency was working with Facebook to block users’ by their individual account, IP address or device, such as a cell phone or computer.

Elsewhere at the conference, Lipp said law enforcement agencies discussed new social media tools that could be implemented to aid in crime-fighting, but at the price of potentially costing citizens their freedom.

Increasingly in discussion in workshops held by and for top police executives from throughout the world (mostly US, Canada and the United Kingdom, with others like Nigeria among a total of 13,000 representatives of the law enforcement community in town for the event),  and widely available from vendors, were technologies and department policies that allow agencies to block content, users and even devices – for example, ‘Geofencing’ software that allows departments to block service to a specified device when the device leaves an established virtual geographic perimeter,” Lipp wrote. “The capability is a basic function of advanced mobile technologies like smartphones, ‘OnStar’ type features that link drivers through GIS to central assistance centers, and automated infrastructure and other hardware including unmanned aerial systems that must ‘sense and respond.’”

Apple, the maker of the highly popular iPhone, applied for a patent last year which allows a third-party to compromise a wireless device and change its functionality, “such as upon the occurrence of a certain event.”

Bloggers at the website PrivacySOS.org acknowledged that former federal prosecutor-turned-Facebook security chief Joe Sullivan was scheduled to speak during the conference at a panel entitled “Helping Law Enforcement Respond to Mass Gatherings Spurred by Social Media,” and suggested that agencies could be partnering with tech companies to keep users of certain services for communicating and planning protests and other types of demonstrations. A 2011 Bloomberg report revealed that Creativity Software, a UK based company with international clients, had sold geofencing programs to law enforcement in Iran which was then used to track political dissidents. US Senator Mark Kirk (R-Illinois) told Bloomberg that those companies should be condemned for being complicit in human rights abuses. And while this week’s convention in Philadelphia was for law enforcement agencies around the globe, it wouldn’t be too surprising to see American companies adopt similar systems.

Is Facebook really working with the police to create a kill switch to stop activists from using the website to mobilize support for political demonstrations?” the PrivacySOS blog asked. “How would such a switch function? Would Facebook, which reportedly hands over our data to government agencies at no cost, block users from posting on its website simply because the police ask them to? The company has been criticized before for blocking environmentalist and anti-GMO activists from posting, but Facebook said those were mistakes. Let’s hope this is a misunderstanding, too.”

Lipp has since pointed to a recent article in Governing magazine in which it was reported that the Chicago Police Department is using “network analysis” tools to identify persons of interest on social media.

95.9 percent of law enforcement agencies use social media, 86.1 percent for investigative purposes,” Lipp quoted from the head of the social media group for the International Association of Chiefs of Police.

Published by RT.com

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Drunk Cop’s Accident Defense: ‘Strippers Drugged Me!’ https://truthvoice.com/2015/10/drunk-cops-accident-defense-strippers-drugged-me/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=drunk-cops-accident-defense-strippers-drugged-me Fri, 30 Oct 2015 09:26:01 +0000 http://truthvoice.com/2015/10/drunk-cops-accident-defense-strippers-drugged-me/

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It’s the “Strippers drugged me!” defense.

The Linden, NJ, cop who drove head-on into a tractor trailer on the West Shore Expressway in Staten Island last March — killing his fellow cop and another pal — is now claiming he may have been drugged with a date-rape drug at the borough’s notorious Curves Gentleman’s Club.

The lawyer for allegedly drunken wrong-way driver and suspended cop Pedro Abad raised the Hail Mary defense during an appearance on his aggravated vehicular homicide indictment in Staten Island Supreme Court Thursday, the Staten Island Advance reported.

The blame-it-on-the-strippers gambit does not take into account Abad’s two prior DUI arrests or the tests showing he had a .24 blood alcohol level after the fatal crash — three times the legal limit.

Abad’s lawyer, Mario Gallucci, said his medical expert believes Abad may have been drugged without his knowledge with GHB, and wants to test the cop’s post-crash blood sample for the powerful central-nervous system depressant, the newspaper reported. Abad used a wheelchair during his court appearance, and his lawyer said he still faces additional surgeries.

Outside court, Gallucci suggested to a reporter that the practice of drugging patrons is a known risk at strip clubs like Scores.

Gallucci had repped another client, Jared Reifschneider, who also caused a wrong-way crash in 2012 after also getting bombed at Curves — and the lawyer said his expert may be looking into that as a case of GHB drugging as well — though Reifschneider has already pleaded guilty and gone to prison.

The charges against Abad carry up to 25 years in prison. The crash immediately killed pal Joseph Rodriguez, 28, who was in the front passenger seat.

Frank Viggiano, 28, another Linden police officer, was seated in the back seat and died a short time after the crash at Staten Island University Center.

Abad’s partner, Patrick Kudlac, 23, was seriously injured but survived.

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Anti-Police Graffiti Spreading in Texas https://truthvoice.com/2015/09/anti-police-graffiti-spreading-in-texas/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=anti-police-graffiti-spreading-in-texas Mon, 07 Sep 2015 11:34:08 +0000 http://truthvoice.com/2015/09/anti-police-graffiti-spreading-in-texas/

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Graffiti has recently appeared in both Austin, the capital of Texas, and in Houston, the state’s largest city, amid rising violence against US police officers, local media reported Sunday.

Violence-provoking statements in Austin include “Run Over Cops At Traffic Stops” and “Shoot Them In The Cop Car!”

Following the shooting death of a sheriff’s deputy last week in Harris County, Texas, graffiti images calling for the murder of law enforcement authorities have appeared on property around Houston.

Harris County Sheriff Ron Hickman linked the killing of Darren Goforth, the county’s deputy sheriff, to the recent wave of anti-police brutality protests in the United States.

A total of 51 officers were killed in 2014, an 89 percent increase from 2013, when 27 officers were killed, data from the FBI showed in May.

Analysts say tensions between police and citizens have reached an all-time high over the past year as a result of several high-profile police killings.

Numerous protests and riots have occurred across the US against police brutality and racial injustice since last summer.

Nearly 800 people were killed by police since the beginning of 2015, according to data collected by an activist group known as Killed By Police.

The actual figure, however, could be much higher because the database only includes confirmed police killings as reported by the media.

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