A new lawsuit filed in federal court last month alleges that the Baton Rouge Police Department ran a “torture warehouse” where members of its Street Crimes Unit strip searched, beat, and otherwise humiliated people and then released them, often without their being charged with a crime. Soon after the lawsuit was filed, the FBI opened a civil rights investigation into the allegations of misconduct at the now-shuttered warehouse known as “the BRAVE Cave.”

  • girlfreddy
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    921 year ago

    East Baton Rouge Parish District Attorney Hillar Moore said the arrests of Street Crimes members could impact hundreds of criminal cases, comparing the fallout from the revelations around the BRAVE Cave to those during the 2021 Narcotics Unit scandal. Frampton said that the fact that the BRAVE Cave sprung from police reform is “a frustrating irony and it makes you wonder about the capacity there is to reform these sorts of institutions without dismantling them altogether."

    Defunding/dismantling is the next step, and if cops keep doing shit like this it will happen.

    #ACAB

    • @A_Random_Idiot
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      231 year ago

      Thats the trick.

      You cant reform them.

      They are corrupt to the core.

      All reformation does is change how they cover up their corruption and take out their anger on the public at large.

      The only way to get rid of police corruption, is to raise a new generation of intelligent, educated peace officers who are trained to de-escalate, trained on how to deal with difficult people who may be in crisis, who know the laws they are supposed to enforce, who do not want a thin blue line to hide behind, who do not need qualified immunity to protect them from their ineptitude, Who will actively arrested fellow officers and out corruption and criminal behavior should the need arise, and who wont stand by the side and do nothing while it happens infront of them.

      And once they are ready, you fire every. single. person. associated with the police. You root out the corruption by purging it, and sterilizing the basket, so it has no roots from with to ruin the new crop.

      then you put civilian oversite over them to investigate and monitor to make sure the new batch are staying true to their purpose and training.

    • @SalamendaciousOP
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      111 year ago

      Make any argument you want. Whenever you want. For me, I don’t think the defund argument will ever work nationally. I think all the defund argument does is help Republicans fund raise.

      • @ChicoSuave
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        131 year ago

        Let’s take the money away from police and put it into social workers and therapy. A cop in a given area usually makes twice what a social worker does, so let’s get some bang for our buck and remove all police, replace them with social workers. Twice the bodies to do the same amount of work but now with a focus on fixing the communities that generate the problems. A focus on working to solve the cause and remediate the families of those affected. Defending the police can happen and it will be gloriously effective.

        Funny enough the only people who will start violent crime are ex cops who want to show how violence is only solved with violence.

        • @SalamendaciousOP
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          21 year ago

          There are a lot of great potential solutions. The problem is getting people in a position of authority where they can effect change. This isn’t a insult to you but leaving a comment on a relatively obscure message board isn’t likely to accomplish much. We need to find a way to motivate enough people to vote to elect politicians who see the problems and are open to solutions.

        • @Cryophilia
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          11 year ago

          Funny enough the only people who will start violent crime are ex cops

          You can’t seriously be this naive

      • flipht
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        51 year ago

        I mean, okay. But it doesn’t change the fact that it’s true.

        Maybe it won’t work nationally, but when locals get tired enough of illegal policing that doesn’t work, the refund argument might work locally.

      • @Mamertine
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        1 year ago

        100%. We as a society create laws. There is no point in making these laws if there is no one to enforce them. Further more, most Americans want police to show up when they dial 911. Defunding the police isn’t going to happen.

        What can happen, mandate body camera usage. Have an independent auditor review the footage. Prosecute the crimes discovered on the body cam footage. Terminate the police who do not use the mandated body cameras.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Defunding the police (horrible fucking slogan btw) isn’t about just cutting off police funds and saying fuck it. It’s about redirecting the funds to preventative and less militaristic interventions, including better audit equipment and oversight boards, non-lethal and non-armed social services and mental health interventions, and a refocus on community policing instead of military-style Jack Bauer larping.

          • @Mamertine
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            61 year ago

            Very good.

            Those are fine ideas. They need a new slogan then.

            • @TropicalDingdong
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              31 year ago

              I would just add the note that whatever the slogan, however branded the movement, there will be a concerted effort to delegitimize it, both from without and from within.

              Defending the police or dismantling existing departments and replacing them whole cloth is very likely the only viable solution when the cultures in and around the institutions are the problems.

              People seem to think that the marketing needs to be palatable. I don’t. It won’t matter. It will ultimately come to force. It’s unfortunate but the reality is that it seems like the force of violence is the highest truth in this world. We won’t get reforms through dialogue or nibbling at the edges. These institutions need to be forced to change, and they will resist. It will come down to individuals with strong wills who refuse to back down in the face of violence.

              • @lemme_at_it
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                1 year ago

                The solution is not in how you describe it but how you run it. The description is merely the vision on which you build or tear down as necessary. Merely saying defund x or y is no basis for evaluation needed for the widespread acceptance which will lead to implementation.

              • @Cryophilia
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                21 year ago

                It will ultimately come to force.

                And yet the police are the ones who have all the guns. Curious.

          • @lemme_at_it
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            51 year ago

            The current movement is spent & any traction gained has been lost due to bad messaging. The best thing would be to abandon it altogether, start with a coherent message & go with what you said.

          • DominusOfMegadeus
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            41 year ago

            Great description! That said, I now want to pit Jack Bauer against the Baton Rouge PD. JB will destroy them in glorious fashion.

        • JBloodthorn
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          101 year ago

          I want whoever is best trained and equipped to deal with the problem to show up when I call 911. That ain’t always a guy with a gun who barely passed high school.

  • @[email protected]
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    501 year ago

    I did not agree to torture as part of the social contract. Nor did I agree to qualified immunity.

    The social contract has been repeatedly broken by the nation/state. And yet the nation/state still has the keys and purse strings.

  • @kautau
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    1 year ago

    What a shit headline. More like “power hungry cops committed human rights violations after their unit was disbanded for improperly using federal funds”

    • @gAlienLifeform
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      151 year ago

      You really should read the article,this headline is 100% on point. Federal funding supported the creation of the team that carried out this torture while the people in charge were celebrated as reform leaders.

      This sort of thing happens a lot with federal funding into state/county/municipal police departments because we haven’t had an administration/Congress that cared at all about police brutality since I don’t know when and it’s just very easy for them to sign the checks and look the other way, like when the Biden administration approved Memphis’s plan to spend COVID money on the police department that went on to murder Tyre Nichols.

  • @qooqie
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    401 year ago

    What the actual fuck? Are people so fucking stupid they think this is somehow okay or that they won’t get hard slapped in return one day? Jesus Christ, seriously the biggest legal gang in America

    • @SalamendaciousOP
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      91 year ago

      What frustrates me the most is it seems like both parties talk about police reform and then take turns blocking the other party’s bills.

          • @[email protected]
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            191 year ago

            Well it’s something, can’t argue against that. I understand why it failed, though, it’s a reform bill in name only. It doesn’t even take half measures, just offers some cash if states so choose to enact their own reforms.

            • @SalamendaciousOP
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              21 year ago

              I’m not a politician but I’ll pretty much always take something over nothing. I think that this was largely about optics. Democrats did not want to have to combat Republicans saying that they did police reform when Democrats couldn’t get it done when they were in control. So I get it. By killing it before debate could begin they avoided publicity but also any chance at improving it.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                I think it’s more like democrats didn’t want to pass 5% police reform because if they do, republicans will use that to prevent any further reform from ever happening. It will be a combination of

                1. “We already did police reform and the problems solved” OR
                2. “See, police reform doesn’t work”

                So I can see why they want to hold out for a better solution. And it’s not like the police aren’t doing everything to prove the democrats right on a daily basis so the dems case just gets stronger and stronger the more these cops out here fuck around and show who they really are and what they’re capable of.

                • @SalamendaciousOP
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                  11 year ago

                  Could be. I’d still probably take something over nothing.

  • Codex
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    251 year ago

    Having lived there for 10 years, I can attest that BRPD are some of the fattest, grimiest pigs in the game. I would be surprised if several of them aren’t proudly decended from long inbred pedigrees right back to the slave catcher days.

    This whole racist state needs Reconstruction 2.0: tear down all this white supremacist infrastructure and get the people back in charge of their lives.

    • @SalamendaciousOP
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      111 year ago

      It’s incredibly sad but for a lot of, if not all, black folk in South, reconstruction was the last time they got a fair shot at effecting actual change in their state governments.

      • @Ya_Boy_Skinny_Penis
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        -41 year ago

        This is the whitest thing I have read on the internet in a long time.

  • @TropicalDingdong
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    201 year ago

    I would like some feedback on a dumb idea I have. I’m sure it has major flaws, including it being a pipe dream that could never get put into action.

    All police departments are required to be unionized (at whatever resolution the motion is passed, local, state, whatever.).

    Police unions are now responsible for all pensions and benefits, and funded via police salaries. However, municipalities are no longer required to fund any kind of police misconducts or settlements. The funds for these lawsuits come directly from police pensions, and if need be, directly from police paychecks. As well, eliminate qualified immunity and double the penalties for police misconduct of any kind.

    The only way I can think to make reforms to the system apart from its elimination ( which is a pipe dream) is to make make them feel it in their wallets directly, and to make all department members accountable for the conduct of any department members. This would necessitate a cultural transformation, because the old timers who define that culture don’t want their retirements to be chipped away by jr’s doing dumb shitty things.

    Thoughts? I’m sure the idea has flaws, but the force of economic violence can be very coercive.

    • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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      71 year ago

      You’d have to add a provision that any money received in fines or tickets or other such stuffs gets sent to the fed to be shredded so they don’t try to float their boat by ticketing people over every little thing.

      But honestly I could see it working.

    • @mrcleanup
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      41 year ago

      The main problem with this is that the hits these days are in the millions of dollars and that adds up fast. So the inevitable result even with just good faith mistakes would be that people would stop being cops. People who could be good cops wouldn’t join to replace them because of the risk, and the entire thing would likely just disintegrate.

      On the one hand fine! On the other hand, what takes its place?

      This is not intended to be a pro-cop argument, just an explanation of the problem. We need a social institution that can fill that gap in a better way.

      • @slumlordthanatos
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        41 year ago

        I prefer the insurance angle, where LEOs have to carry insurance similar to how doctors carry malpractice insurance. Any settlements are paid for by insurance instead of the department; officers who cause problems will have their rates go up, until they eventually become uninsurable.

        • @steveman_ha
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          21 year ago

          Pretty appropriate way to handle it with current “systems and institutions”, too, nice.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        City of Chicago is 22,000 police officers short of full enforcement. That means the good ones have left and they can’t fire the bad ones, and they pay ridiculous salaries because nobody wants to be a cop. That song ain’t called “fuck the firemen”

      • Dym Sohin
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        11 year ago

        oh noes, glorified parking tickets task force will not be able to assassinate on the job :'<

        there are trained social workers and there are proper SWAT teams to replace this fat underbelly of bureaucracy and corruption

        • @mrcleanup
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          01 year ago

          Sarcasm aside, there’s still gangs and prostitution and shoplifters and domestic violence and all that. Some sort of public safety mechanism needs to exist.

          • @wavebeam
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            1 year ago

            Oh my god, prostitution? What will we do in a world where two consenting adults trade services for money? Thank god we have paid murderers on hand to ensure that can’t happen!

            • @mrcleanup
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              -31 year ago

              Sure, let’s overlook the girls forced into prostitution and pretend they are all consenting adults. Until it is legalized and regulated it’s is an area prone to abuse and exploitation.

          • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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            41 year ago

            Gangs and DV are often problems the cops themselves are some of the worst offenders in, and sex work should be legal anyways.

            Shop lifting is best handled through trial afterwards rather than intervention during.

            The rare instances where an intervention of force is actually necessary could be covered by NG reserves or FBI field agents if a force is seriously so incompetent that they bankrupt themselves on liability.

            • @Cryophilia
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              21 year ago

              Slowly we’re getting back to “cops, but without corruption”

          • Dym Sohin
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            11 year ago

            the police does not PREVENT any of it

            • @mrcleanup
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              21 year ago

              No, but how do we as a society respond, thoughts and prayers or some sort of actual response?

              I’d love to hear your suggestions.

              • @mrcleanup
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                11 year ago

                Lol. Love the downvotes.

                No response! Only criticize!

    • @kautau
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      61 year ago

      Yeah what a stupid headline

      In 2017, however, BRAVE’s funding from the DOJ’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention was not extended because of concerns about East Baton Rouge Parish’s administration of the grant

      “Police program abuses federal funding and goes rogue once funding is pulled, committing civil rights violations”

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Take everything that allows them to live and exist away from them. For real. Make it so people have to step over their body on the sidewalk and no one even bothers to clean it up. Because it’s not worth the time. They are not worth respecting. Or maybe just toss em in a urinal.

    Crooked cops and street thugs are the same enemy. The enemy is both.