Internal Affairs is a Criminal Enterprise at FLPD, Police Chief Patrick Lynn = Coward
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  1. #1
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    Internal Affairs is a Criminal Enterprise at FLPD, Police Chief Patrick Lynn = Coward

    Sergeant investigating cop who shot protester says, “He’s a good guy”
    Sgt. Jeffrey Newman has been removed from the investigation of an injured protester after being accused of bias.

    By Victoria Moorwood Aug 25, 2020, 2:42pm EDT

    Fort Lauderdale Police Sgt. Jeffrey Newman will no longer be allowed to investigate a case of a cop shooting a protester with a rubber bullet after making a biased comment. Civil rights activist LaToya Ratlieff was shot in the face with the less-lethal round during a violent clash between protesters and police just days after George Floyd’s death.

    According to Sun-Sentinel, Ratlieff says Newman told her that Detective Eliezer Ramos — who shot her — is actually a “good guy.”

    “I’ve worked with [him] before. He’s a good guy,” Newman allegedly told Ratlieff. “I know he didn’t intentionally mean to do it. And it’s my job to investigate and to see what happened.”

    18-year-old activist’s teeth knocked out by officer at Chicago protest

    Miracle Boyd
    Due to his comments, Newman has now been removed from the police department’s office of internal affairs and will no longer continue with the investigation. An internal memo accused him of “creating serious doubt... on his ability to independently investigate the matter.” The Sentinel reports Newman’s comments also revived doubt among local activists about the department’s trustworthiness.

    “LaToya was in shock when Sergeant Newman told her about his relationship with Officer Ramos and that he had seemingly predetermined the outcome of an investigation which had barely began,” Ratlieff’s attorneys, Michael Davis and Benedict Kuene, wrote in a written statement.

    “Victims deserve fair and impartial investigations which prioritize justice based on the facts. The days of friends investigating friends need to come to an end. The city must pursue fundamental changes to the way it handles internal affairs investigations.”

    Former Philadelphia cop charged with assault for pepper spraying kneeling protesters

    Cops spraying pepper spray
    “It definitely gives me some concern,” added Rodney Jacobs, assistant director of the city of Miami’s Civilian Investigative Panel. “One thing we definitely champion in our office is that we are unbiased; we champion layers of transparency so the community has trust in us.”

    Body camera footage from the Black Lives Matter rally that left Ratlieff injured showed cops laughing while firing less-lethal rounds at protesters. According to the Sentinel, some officers could be heard saying “Get that motherfu*ker” and “Pop his ass” about demonstrators.

    Ramos has claimed that he was not aiming for Ratlieff, but instead was trying to shoot at a man behind her who was allegedly throwing tear gas canisters back at police. The investigation has been on hold due to Florida’s Police Officer’s Bill of Rights. The law suspends internal affairs investigations while Florida is in a state of emergency, which it has been since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

  2. #2
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    Patrick Lynn "Detective Ramos was shooting large marshmallows at the protesters" "??"

    PL is a total empty suit.

    Total whitewash coverup, PL do not empty your briefcase you are not the person for the job, anytime you discharge a weapon into a crowd you are responsible for what is hits.

    When Eleanor Adderley fired a weapon at Franklin Adderley for his philandering ways she was charged and convicted of a crime and served time, Philandering Franklin was not charged with failing to properly securing his department weapon, why the double standard?

    Extended range launcher, very powerful.

    Deployment of less than lethal munition, foam projectiles????
    (By Liz Szabo, Kaiser Health News
    In cities across the country, police departments have attempted to quell unrest spurred by the death of George Floyd by firing rubber bullets into crowds, even though five decades of evidence shows such weapons can disable, disfigure and even kill.)

    Who was the use of force expert?

    DG looks quite weathered, what happened to the large diamond ring SG gave you during the oie Rothstein Days.... The Feds took it back.


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJpui5EWLCw

  3. #3
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    Greenlaw should wear two masks

  4. #4
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    Patrick Lynn return to retirement life, you are not a leader

    Fort Lauderdale police officers laugh after shooting rubber bullets at protesters

    By Nicholas NehamasMiami Herald
    Sarah Blaskey
    Thu., July 2, 2020timer8 min. read

    MIAMI—Fort Lauderdale police officers laughed and celebrated after shooting protesters with rubber bullets at a May 31 George Floyd rally in Fort Lauderdale, newly released body camera footage shows.

    “Beat it, little f--er,” Detective Zachary Baro, leader of a Fort Lauderdale SWAT team unit, can be heard saying after officers shot “less lethal” projectiles at a protester. The protester was walking away after tossing a tear-gas canister back at the line of police.

    A few minutes later, another officer, Jamie Chatman, came up to Baro behind the police line and asked if his body camera was off. Baro replied — incorrectly — that his camera was in “stand-by” mode and not recording. The two officers then began laughing and joking about the people they had shot with rubber bullets.

    “Did you see me f-k up those motherf--rs?” one of the officers said.

    “I got the one f--er,” the other replied amid laughter.

    George Kirkham, a former police officer and professor emeritus at Florida State University, condemned the behaviour captured on the footage.

    “This is serious misconduct. This is people with badges acting like thugs,” Kirkham said. “It’s like a cancer. If you let it go, it will spread.”

    Asked for comment, a spokeswoman for the Fort Lauderdale police said the department would have to review the footage.

    After publication online, Fort Lauderdale Police Chief Rick Maglione said in a statement to the Herald: “Your story shows less than three minutes of an eight minute and 43 second long video. The entire video clearly demonstrates our officers were under attack by a group of people who chose to use violence instead of peace to antagonize the situation. Although the language is extreme, and offensive to some, our officers were dealing with the chaos of a developing situation.”

    Maglione did not respond to questions about whether Baro and Chatman had been placed under internal investigation or removed from duty.

    The officers’ conduct was revealed in hours of footage provided by the Fort Lauderdale Police Department in response to a Herald public records request. The footage bolsters protesters’ accounts that police aggression sparked the first documented confrontation between police and protesters.

    Marchers hurled plastic water bottles after Officer Steven Pohorence rushed into a crowd of protesters and pushed a kneeling woman in the head. Police responded with a round of tear gas. Still, body camera footage shows that even after that, protesters quickly moved to reestablish peace.

    “Please I am begging you, we’re peaceful,” one man can be heard yelling.

    “Do you see this?” another man asked to the line of riot police pointing to the protesters taking a knee in the street. “We are going to stop this. We are going to be the generation that brings peace.”

    After a few tense minutes, video shows police started to throw tear gas at the group again. Within 15 minutes of Pohorence shoving the woman, Baro had emptied his six-chamber rubber bullet launcher and had to reload, he can be heard saying in his body camera video. (Pohorence was charged with misdemeanour battery Tuesday.)

    “If you need it, give me a target,” Baro yelled to other officers from behind the line of police.

    The comment stuck out to Robert Drago, a retired lieutenant colonel at the Broward Sheriff’s Office, who reviewed the footage.

    “If you’re not seeing a threat, why are you asking for a threat?” Drago said. “That would almost lead you to believe that they were indiscriminately firing.”

    Baro said in his incident report that he was firing rubber bullets at protesters throwing tear gas canisters and other objects.

    “In an effort to stop officers and innocent people from being hurt, I targeted these violent subjects with my 40mm less lethal launcher,” Baro wrote. “I deployed less lethal rounds targeting lower abdomen and the large muscle groups of the legs in an effort to deter their violent actions.”

    In the report, Baro does not record his comments to other officers. He does say that he was struck in his left thigh by a rock “about the size of my fist” and that he saw protesters throwing “rocks, fireworks, smoke bombs, and water bottles containing an unknown yellowish liquid.”

    “F--, I’m getting rocked and bottled, bro,” Baro says on camera.

    Chatman said he was struck by a half-stick of dynamite, according to his incident report. Video shows an explosive blowing up at officers’ feet. His report does not indicate that he was injured.

    Kirkham said internal affairs should investigate the conduct of Baro and other officers in the video, particularly given his position as a SWAT team leader.

    “I understand what it’s like to have that adrenaline. I’ve been in a riot situation,” Kirkham said. “But that does not excuse that kind of verbiage and behaviour. It suggests that the police think they can do whatever they want and get away with it.”

    Other policing experts agreed.

    “It’s unprofessional. They shouldn’t be laughing and joking about shooting and potentially hurting people,” said Philip Sweeting, former deputy chief of police in Boca Raton. “It reinforces the public’s distrust of the police. It shouldn’t be tolerated.”

    Drago also criticized the behaviour of Chatman, the officer who asked Baro if his body camera was off.

    “It shows intent and then he makes inappropriate, unprofessional statements,” said Drago. “It’s not a carnival. This isn’t hit-three-times-and-get-a-stuffed-animal. It doesn’t seem like these officers had public safety in mind at all.”

    Christina Currie, an attorney and chair of the Fort Lauderdale Citizens’ Police Review Board, said Chatman asking if the body camera was off posed a “grave concern.”

    “It was pretty obvious the officers were comfortable about talking about turning the camera off,” Currie said. “It didn’t feel like the officer wearing the camera felt shocked about hearing that question. There need to be clearly articulated consequences for violations.”

    Fort Lauderdale police policy on body cameras states that: “Once the (camera) is activated to record an interaction, it shall remain on until the event has ended.”

    City Manager Chris Lagerbloom said in a statement that he was “troubled” by the footage uncovered by the Herald.

    “While I am a huge supporter of the hard work of our police force, I would not want the actions of a few to taint the public’s perception of the dedication and professionalism of the department as a whole,” Lagerbloom said. “I can understand the intensity of the moment captured on body camera footage as the officers were clearly under attack. ... The language the officers used, and sentiment expressed is not consistent with what the public expects from our police force.”

    He said he had asked the chief to “look into the matter.”

    As the clash intensified and police tossed gas, small groups of protesters retaliated: first with plastic bottles, then by tossing tear gas canisters back at police, and finally with fireworks and rocks. Officers said in their reports that those agitators then used peaceful protesters as human shields.

    Outside the parking garage at Southeast First Avenue and Second Street, officers shot dozens of rubber bullets and tossed tear gas at kneeling protesters, including LaToya Ratlieff, a non-profit grant writer, who testified before a congressional subcommittee Monday. Detective Eliezer Ramos shot Ratlieff in the face with a rubber bullet while she was peacefully demonstrating. She suffered a fractured eye socket.

    While Ramos said in his official report that he was aiming for someone behind Ratlieff who had been throwing tear gas canisters, footage taken from various angles shows a cloud of tear gas so thick it’s impossible to make out anything happening behind Ratlieff. (Footage from Ramos’ body camera started after he shot Ratlieff. )

    After Ratlieff was shot, protesters returned to the intersection chanting “Hands up! Don’t Shoot!”

  5. #5
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    Police maintain it was the protesters who started the violence by jumping on an unmarked police vehicle stationed at the mouth of a public parking garage around 6:50 p.m. Officer Stylianee Hayes, who was driving the black 2019 Toyota Camry, felt her “life was in imminent danger,” according to her official incident report. She said she was so worried for her safety that she did not turn on her body camera.

    “She came over the radio screaming for help. She was being surrounded,” Maglione, the chief, told the Herald a few days after the incident.

    A nearby officer on a motorcycle who was present at the moment Hayes called for help did not make an emergency call of his own. None of the hours of body camera footage released by police, nor the more than 100 photos and videos taken by photographers on the scene and reviewed by the Herald, show anyone touching Hayes’ vehicle. Nor was Hayes’ 6:51 p.m. call for backup the emergency distress call of a terrified officer described by Maglione and dozens of officers in sworn incident reports.

    “Send me a few more units please, they’re starting to surround my car,” Hayes said, according to a BSO recording of her dispatch. A few moments later she repeated the request: “They’re jumping on my car. Send me units.”

    Dozens of nearby officers responded. Footage suggests a few arrived on the scene in time to see Pohorence get pelted with water bottles, but not in time to see what set the protesters off. Police thought they were responding to a violent “mob,” according to their reports.

    Within minutes of arriving, police began donning gas masks and deploying launchers loaded with rubber bullets.

    The footage did not show a force that was well-prepared.

    In his report, Baro did not mention the fact that his gas mask was leaking early on during the clash, likely impairing his vision. He can be heard sniffing and repeatedly cursing in the footage, as another officer helps him adjust the mask. “Your whole mask is f--ed up, dude,” the second officer says. “It’s getting on your head backwards.”

    “The SWAT team is supposed to be the best of the best,” said Drago, the retired BSO lieutenant colonel. “It doesn’t appear Fort Lauderdale had the best of the best out there that day.”

    Baro wasn’t the only one having trouble.

    “This sh- ain’t doing sh-. It’s in my eyes,” said another officer fumbling with his gas mask on video. Another officer burned her fingers as she tried to move a smoking canister with her hand.

    “That’s hot as f--,” she said. “I almost burned my fingers. You didn’t tell me it was hot.”

  6. #6
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    Where is the message from the new chief on the department website

    Did the new temporary chief retire already?

  7. #7
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    This is what a leader is, criminal conduct by law enforcement will not be tolerated.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fERrznTeX_E

  8. #8
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    Meep meep

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Greenlaw should wear two masks
    There is no amount of masks she can have on that will help her. With the size of her nose she should have a mask over each nostril

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