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Re: 'They treated me like an animal': Police violence leaves protesters with missing teeth, blindness 

By: weco in FFT4 | Recommend this post (4)
Sun, 21 Nov 21 12:35 AM | 53 view(s)
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Msg. 01898 of 13976
(This msg. is a reply to 01897 by clo2)

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An interesting study would be an account of how many Millions of dollars cities have had to pay out for wrongful deaths, abuse cases because of rotten cops with no respect for folks they are supposed to protect. We've had our share, but how many more across the country, and how many more go undisputed? All these macho losers that were never vetted, carry their prejudices into their workplaces... Sickening. We've a local Sheriff who is fighting off his RWNJ attitude, not quite enough to force a recall, but should have. He's nt running again, but his choice as a replacement will get torn apart if he doesn't resign by then... Police unions are the worst as far as supporting the lies, hiding body camera videos... Need to tear 'em down, start over.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
'They treated me like an animal': Police violence leaves protesters with missing teeth, blindness
By: clo2
in FFT4
Sun, 21 Nov 21 12:22 AM
Msg. 01897 of 13976

SPECIAL REPORT: 'They treated me like an animal': Police violence leaves protesters with missing teeth, blindness

By Char Adams
Nov. 19, 2021

Rickia Young, a 29-year-old nurse’s aide, clearly remembers the moment police officers swarmed her car in West Philadelphia last year. She heard one window shatter, then another. Not only was she worried for her own safety, but Young said she feared for her toddler son’s life.

“The cops were banging and yelling, ‘Get the f--- out of the car!’” Young recalled. “They were trying to bust all of the windows out. I was yelling, ‘My son’s in the car, stop! Stop!’ Then I felt my face on fire from the mace. From that moment, I was fighting to live.”

She was driving through West Philadelphia early on Oct. 27, 2020, to pick up a family friend who was out among demonstrators protesting the killing of Walter Wallace Jr., a 27-year-old Black man who had been shot by police responding to a 911 call a day earlier. She was attempting to make a U-turn through the rowdy crowd when Philadelphia police officers approached her car, broke the windows, dragged her from the vehicle and beat her. She became separated from her son amid the attack. The city of Philadelphia recently agreed to pay Young a $2 million settlement for the attack in September. Young, whose son is now 3, has also sued the police union over the photo, which she claims was misleading. The lawsuit is pending. However, she said neither the settlement nor the lawsuit can undo what happened.

“I still ache every day,” she said of her injuries. “I can barely play with my son. If I try to run, my back will hurt. I can barely do everyday things. I can’t even hold a baby for a long time because my arm will give out on me. I never thought in a million years that my body would feel so old so soon. It’s really been hard.”

Later, the nation's largest police labor union,the National Fraternal Order of Police, posted a Facebook photo showing Young's son in the arms of a female Philadelphia police officer just after the incident. In the post, officials said the officer rescued the lost child from the “complete lawlessness” of the protest, writing, “WE ARE the only thing standing between Order and Anarchy.”

more:
http://www.nbcnews.com/specials/protesters-injured-by-police-george-floyd-still-trying-to-heal/index.html?cid=eml_nbn_20211120&user_email=d60e03639eee858a9d1f722503050fb5c4c275d9e0d473a7e1f6182e26eccb3c


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