19 Comments
- inactive, on 08/22/2008, -1/+10Sounds like it's time to clean house in the Indianapolis PD. As a member of the law enforcement community, I have no compassion for these !@$*(&%!@$%s. They should be hung out to dry. And then some. LEO's are given a sacred trust to protect and serve the public, and when that trust is violated, there is no room for mercy. Hang 'em!
- Minarchian, on 08/22/2008, -1/+7The roads are unsafe...but it's not the traffic you have to worry about.
- inactive, on 08/22/2008, -0/+3Quite often the cleanup starts with the State Police coming in, but if they don't take care of business, bring on the Feds. Even though I trust the feds less than anybody else!.
- Jonascord, on 08/22/2008, -0/+3This is CHICAGO! The GOVERNOR is under possible indictment! The last Guv is in the slam already! The Senators are crooks! Who yah gonna call? Ghostbusters? The federal DA is the guy who found Scooter Libby guilty of being a republican!
- MarineVeteran1, on 08/22/2008, -1/+4If what you say is true, I find it unimaginable that no one has made a call to the DOJ to weed out the rats. When the local cops turn criminal, it is the Feds who come in and clean it up. That's the chain of command, so to speak, for law enforcement.
It seems strange in today's world that we are dealing with the same non-sense in your city as we did in the prohibition days. Corruption knows no limits, and entire departments can be slowly infected with it if left unchecked. I suppose this is an example of history repeating itself, eh? - MarineVeteran1, on 08/24/2008, -1/+4Old steel bed spring frame- $10.00
Alligator clips and wires - $ 8.00
TA-312 field telephone - $100.00
Watching a scumbag rapist shake, rattle, and roll -
Priceless.
- spinningplates2, on 08/22/2008, -1/+4In Chicago we also have a problem of Cops who are also in street gangs. But you can't do anything because of the Union red tape. really sad. Gangs always know when the are going to be raided.
- flip2trip, on 08/24/2008, -1/+4And the best news? You can use it over, and over, and over....sorta pays for itself doesn't it?
- TheCommittee, on 08/24/2008, -0/+2Dear Readers,
If Officer Smith is found guilty of the charges, he should face the same consequences as any other rappist and/or child molestor, gets in our penal system. Sometimes a teenager will cry rape, merely to get out of trouble with police. But sometimes, police, having witnessed their brethren at CPS and other three letter agencies, get away with fraud, and so many other criminal acts, in Family Court, they begin to believe themselves above the law. A good cop having gone bad is not a new concept. Police are human beings and have succumbed to the temptations of crime, on countless occasions. Even all of the psychological testing submitted to candidates cannot weed out the bad eggs from the good ones. However, to punish a police officer, to the fullest extent of the law, is the least we can do, to best exemplify our distain for this officer's criminal act; that is, if he is guilty...! - inactive, on 08/23/2008, -0/+2I don't believe the prohibition corruption involved "slime" this putrid....intimidated rape of an innocent 19 year?...
.I'm sure this 36 year old "Pig" would squeal any demanded tune if he was intimidated by a sharp blade on his juggler! - FascistNation, on 08/23/2008, -0/+2Sounds like SOP to me. Better get used to it.
- inactive, on 08/22/2008, -0/+2Maybe we could get the Mexicans to pay Johnny Sutton to take the case. He likes to put cops in jail. Oh, wait, not dirty ones.
- inactive, on 08/23/2008, -0/+1What is going on in Indianapolis? You do know that Indiana now has a liberal Democrat Governor, Evan Bayh, don't you? How do you suppose that happened in a "red state?" Well, don't you suppose that the demographics in the "Indy 500" city (as in other big cities across the Nation) have changed dramatically with the influx of illegal aliens (so much so that this red state may change to a blue state, I heard)? Heaven help true Hoosiers if it does! However, if there's corruption at the top.....not saying there is, but that becomes highly suspect if it's in the police department, as corruption usually permeates all the way down (police). One hand washes the other! As an aside, Bayh is one of the speculations as Obama's VP. We'll see - it may be announced tonight.
- ProudPagan, on 08/26/2008, -0/+1Dear The Committee:
"Sometimes a teenager will cry rape, merely to get out of trouble with police." Sounds like a rape apologist to me! Do you know rape is the most under reported crime there is? Do you know why? Rape is the only crime where the victim is actually on trial. Your "cry rape" excuse has let millions of rapists aka MEN off the hook for hundreds of years. When a woman "cries rape" she must prove her character beyond a shadow of a doubt. It is her conduct that is under the microscope not HIS THE PERPETRATOR. A woman is asked why she was in a particular place at a particular time, what she was wearing, how many men she has slept with, etc. Meanwhile the rapist skates! False rape claims are rare at best. However, due to our society's warped views on women and women's sexuality, millions of women are too afraid to come forward for fear of not being believed and those fears are well founded due to people like yourself who believe women only "cry rape." - MarineVeteran1, on 08/24/2008, -0/+1I'd agree with you on the technical aspect of the COC, but in this case, you're talking Illinois- land of corruption. One had better think twice than to trust the state agencies, especially with Blagojevich and Daley at the helm. There's not a dimes difference when you juxtapose the Chicago crew with the infrastructure of the Illinois State Police. They're usually 'in bed' with each other, covering each other's 'six' to maintain their status and position.
Like you, I don't have much faith in the Feds, at least when it comes to impartiality and their propensity for going overboard. They too can be swayed into action or inaction for purely political reasons, but in a national sense, which makes the situation even more difficult for the public to discern who the bums are -vs- the good guys.
In the case of Illinois (spinningplates comment), I don't think there's much of a choice. - MarineVeteran1, on 08/24/2008, -0/+1Think again. Prohibition spawned crime beyond your imagination, Al Capone, et. al.. The mob weren't exactly Boy Scouts, and they would butcher, rob, rape, torture, etc., if you got in their way. The mob infiltrated EVERYONE, including the police. Elliot Ness put a stop to that nonsense in Chicago, and later in Ohio too.
For a cop to think he could get away with this... could point to a problem within the department. That is unless he's turned into a sociopath- or a psychopath during his tenure as a police officer. Oral interviews, written tests, OJT as a 'Rookie' will usually smoke out people like this.
But not always... - inactive, on 08/25/2008, -1/+2I looked up the case and the corruption of Chicago that was mentioned above. After looking in to it all it seems to me the bar to become anything anymore, for example a Police Officer has been officially lowered to meet AA policies. Expect more the of the same as the browning of America continues unabated. Gee, I can't wait to live in the third world can you? /sarcasm
Small piece of History: Pre-1965 in America radicals and Communists were the ONLY ones pushing the idea that race and religion were meaningless trivialities. Forced racial integration was considered to be a Communist plot, largely because it was a Communist plot. And if you think I exaggerate, just consult some history books.
Multiculturalism is a communist plot plain and simple it does not work. History proves that. If the liberals really valued self-determination for all races and peoples; so they are free to develop and practice their own cultures and traditions in an environment that will continue their own unique development then they would not be promoting a race-less and class-less society through a Multiculturalism Utopia Society. - Jonascord, on 08/25/2008, -0/+1Unfortunately, Ness didn't do *****. He put Big Al away on tax evasion, but Capone was followed by Frank Nitti, then Paul Ricca, who was followed by Tony Accardo, then Sam Giancana, and Joe Aiuppa, and on and on. If you have seen "Casino" 90% of what happened in the movie was true. Tony Spilotro was played by Joe Pesci, and died as in the movie, beaten to death in an Indiana cornfield. The Outfit runs Chicago. A cop in Chicago costs $100, more if it's a felony.
- MarineVeteran1, on 08/24/2008, -0/+1ccsco8462,
Johnny Sutton, public enemy #1.
Lousy human being, skunk, political opportunist deserving nothing less than a public flogging and banishment from the country.
When someone weakens our National Defense (our borders) for any reason, they are walking down the road of treason. That is exactly what that SOB did when he manipulated that Texas jury.
Get a whip- maybe even a rope.



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