on 04-12-2014 04:03 PM
. http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2012/04/officer-regina-tasca-goes-rogue.html
Heres a clue- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LClXj3XGuRM . . . . . . . . https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdgIxJNlG_Y
Tasca instinctively did what any legitimate peace officer should do: She intervened to protect the victim, pulling Rella off the helpless and battered young man. Tasca’s act was one of instinctive decency, genuine principle, and no small amount of courage. It was also the action dictated by her department’s use-of-force policy, the first page of which specifies that it is “the responsibility of law enforcement to take steps possible to prevent or stop the illegal or inappropriate use of force by other officers.”
In his report on the case, Judge Donohue acknowledged that Tasca acted in compliance with the use-of-force policy – but he dismissed that fact on the preposterous grounds that “no evidence was presented to establish that Officer Tasca even knew about the document.”
The judge dismissed the fact that Tasca acted according to the law because there was no proof that she knew the law? This judge is the so-called independent expert that the Bogota mayor and his cohorts hired. He’s now retired. I wonder when that happened. The New Jersey article provides this quote about the judge from the mayor:
“She had the hearing. He turned around and said she should be fired. We did the right thing by her I think. We did what we were supposed to do. It certainly wasn’t political.”
Earlier in the same month, Tasca had prompted criticism for failing to rush to the aid of her partner, Officer Jay Fowler, during a brief confrontation with a tiny, drunken woman at a hospital. The woman, who was not a criminal suspect, was taken to the hospital for medical attention. She decided to leave, and when Fowler – who had already surrendered custody to the hospital – tried to stop her, the young woman “flailed” her arms, inflicting a small scratch on one of Fowler’s hands that tore open an old scab.
As a result of this “altercation” with a woman whom he outweighed by about 100 pounds, Fowler spent a week on paid medical leave, according to Donohue’s report.
“Nobody had said anything to me about the earlier case until after the incident with the Ridgefield officers,” Tasca pointed out to me. Her refusal to gang-tackle a tiny, confused woman in a hospital, coupled with her active intervention to stop a criminal assault on an unarmed, mentally unbalanced man who was not a criminal suspect, supposedly established a “pattern” of behavior that made Tasca a danger to her fellow officers.
The “good old boy” cop suffers a scratch on his hand and gets a week off with pay, while Tasca gets fired and worse. This is what happens when good officers don’t go along:
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on 05-12-2014 08:56 AM
Some of your posts are a little confliting with info and claims and I just wondered if most of it was a wind up, that's why I asked. Above for instance ? Your dad lets you run power from his shed, but if you get a place of your own he would get you kicked out? You see my dilemma ??
My dad may not intentionally get me kicked out of an apartment, not directly, but he would most likely tell anyone who asked where I was living. This includes my sister's family, and the police as he says that he is friends with them and takes their word over mine. My dad don't think much of me, he don't even see me as a woman. I hate being there, but have no place else to go. If I try to sleep in my car in Portsmouth or any surrounding areas, police probibly would not allow it. They made me leave the "Y" up north and I had a membership there. I wasn't bothering anyone sleeping in my car waiting for them to open. didn't matter to police.
on 05-12-2014 09:05 AM
on 05-12-2014 10:20 AM
softail
Are you in Virginia or New Hampshire ?
Ever thought of house sitting while people are away on holidays or whatever ?
Virginia / North Carolina has a stack of military people who are off to war zones all the time, often at very short notice
I know some of them have house sitters.
on 05-12-2014 10:23 AM
on 05-12-2014 10:28 AM
on 05-12-2014 10:46 AM
softail, Are you in Virginia or New Hampshire ?
Nither, i'm in Ohio near the tri state area, in 20 minutes I can be in kentuckey... going east along the river,, Portsmouth, Wheelersberg, Ashland, and Hunington West Virginia. Southeastern Ohio. But I'm from Columbus (central Ohio) and know that area much better
Ever thought of house sitting while people are away on holidays or whatever ? Virginia / North Carolina has a stack of military people who are off to war zones all the time, often at very short notice
I know some of them have house sitters.
I think I'd like that, and would take my duties of caring for their property while carefull not to run up their utilites bills seriously. Only thing is many people around here smoke and I can't stand to be around it, so it would have to be a non smoking household.
Where do I start?
on 05-12-2014 10:52 AM
Softail
Seriously, do you have to ask "Where do I start ?"
Use your effing brainfor gods sake.
How about Google.
You have Craigslist in the US ?
Type in House sitters, house minders into a search engine.
BTW, I don't know you or your back ground, with your "story", I wouldn't **bleep** any military people off by doing something you shouldn't.
on 05-12-2014 11:40 AM
You brought it up i thought you knew someone. sure i'll run a listing on craigslist, not sure what section or city to list in, Chillothee would be the nearest.
No, you don't know my background, I wouldn't do anything i shouldn't and now that i think of it, bad idea, as easally as I get accused of things, watching over someone's house would be asking for trouble i think. I'll just hold out for the apartment if it ever comes and keep buying mega and classic lottery tickets when I can afford them. thats the good plan. Because if I win, I can pick and choose where I want to live and what kind of house to build. But while deciding, I can travel in a motor home checking out diffrent places. and thats just plain fun
on 05-12-2014 11:54 AM
I'm really sorry to hear of the horrors the op has suffered at the hands of the police but having said that I believe there are
two sides to every story.
The police in my town are terrific and they are the only ones I can talk about. . The suburb I used to live and work in was rife with criminal activity and in many ways still is,
and to be a cop was to face huge risks . If there was/is a problem they are there within minutes so as an ordinary citizen I felt safe. I've seen them carry out many humane acts.
Re some of the Cop shows from the USA some of the handling looks terribly rough even though it's played down for the TV.
But as with any profession I suppose you get the good and bad ones. To be honest from what I've seen though the cops usually only show aggression when the perps resist or threaten.
on 05-12-2014 12:00 PM
" To be honest from what I've seen though the cops usually only show aggression when the perps resist or threaten. "
That's the way I see it.
In Aus, get pulled over for anything, smile and be nice, sometimes get a lower fine or even let off with a warning.
Act the smart **bleep**, give some lip and they will throw every fine they can at you and possibly put a yellow canary
on your windscreen which means you have to walk home !!!
You only have to watch the Melbourne Highway cop show to know that, I can't believe how many drivers
give lip to the cops.