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Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
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at the welfare mall
let's see, no beating heart, does not breathe or cry, no pulse and no temperature
And you'd know this before smashing the window how? What if it was under a blanket in the car seat and only the foot was sticking out? That's really common when a kid is asleep in a car to cover them with a light blanket. Look, I agree with most the stuff you post here showing how completely inapt and corrupt a lot of police officers tend to be at their jobs, that isn't one of these times.
 
Jul 12, 2002
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let's see, no beating heart, does not breathe or cry, no pulse and no temperature........ehh not real... So police should do something off "looks" not facts..... sounds legit, you should probably work at a gas station for life.....
But if it's a real baby and it's dying it might not be making any movements at all...because it's dying. You must have some super-human powers if you can tell if a baby has a pulse, take its temperature, and feel its heart beating through a locked vehicle with the windows up.
 
May 7, 2013
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33°
www.hoescantstopme.biz
A whopping 38 US children die annually from car-related heat-exhaustion, that's .00001% of the population in the US. Go play your world's smallest violin championing some dumb ass pigs attempting to save a doll (NOT A REAL BABY) elsewhere..............

lets see a drug addicted concierge, a 30 something movie theater employee, a fake DJ (prob a foreigner), and an aussie are going to logically explain away and condone US law enforcement inappropriate actions..... only on :siccness: yee

 
Last edited:
May 7, 2013
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www.hoescantstopme.biz
Police shooting protests help highlight plight of mentally ill in jails


When Michael James Tyree was killed in a San Jose jail cell, his lifeless body found Aug. 27 battered and bruised after an encounter with correctional officers, there were no Twitter hashtags, no spontaneous street protests, no national news vans parked on the curb.

The rise of powerful civil rights movements such as Black Lives Matter -- and the deaths of Michael Brown, Freddie Gray and Eric Garner, all of whom were black -- have steered the national narrative around police force toward the systemic abuse of minority communities.

But the swift and shocking arrests of three Santa Clara County jail guards on suspicion of murder in the death of Tyree, who was white, signals that the heightened focus on police brutality will also raise awareness on a growing crisis confronting another often-ignored part of society -- the mentally ill in our country's jails and prisons.


Protesters participate in a rally Sept. 4, 2015, outside the Santa Clara County Main Jail in the wake of the death of inmate Michael James Tyree. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)

"This may be a signal of how desperate the situation really is," said Michael Romano, director and co-founder of the Stanford Justice Advocacy Project, which partners with the NAACP to lobby for criminal justice reform.

Advocates say the U.S. criminal justice system has failed the mentally ill for decades, treating people struggling with disease, addiction and estrangement from their families like criminals and valuing punishment and obedience more than treatment and rehabilitation.

more here
 
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Jul 12, 2002
3,219
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A whopping 38 US children die annually from car-related heat-exhaustion, that's .00001% of the population in the US. Go play your world's smallest violin championing some dumb ass pigs attempting to save a doll (NOT A REAL BABY) elsewhere..............

lets see a drug addicted concierge, a 30 something movie theater employee, a fake DJ (prob a foreigner), and an aussie are going to logically explain away and condone US law enforcement inappropriate actions..... only on :siccness: yee

Lol not a foreigner.

Of all the stuff the police can and should be criticized for, is this really a good example? I think the blame should be more on the person that called it in than the police. They were just responding to a report of a baby locked in a hot car, so they're going into it thinking that. The police get there and have seconds to make a decision. The person who called it in probably had at least 5 minutes between when they made the call and when the police arrived to figure out it was a doll.
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
38,734
159,529
113
44
at the welfare mall
A whopping 38 US children die annually from car-related heat-exhaustion, that's .00001% of the population in the US. Go play your world's smallest violin championing some dumb ass pigs attempting to save a doll (NOT A REAL BABY) elsewhere..............

lets see a drug addicted concierge, a 30 something movie theater employee, a fake DJ (prob a foreigner), and an aussie are going to logically explain away and condone US law enforcement inappropriate actions..... only on :siccness: yee

Did you have a bad day or something? Pretty sure the point of this thread is for awareness and discussion right? I agree with probably 90%+ of the things you post in here and believe that law enforcement and the judicial system as a whole needs a massive overhaul and for disagreeing with one minor thing you said you stoop to throwing condescending jabs. It shows your lack of maturity, that's for sure. lol go somewhere else with all that shit man.
 

Rasan

Producer
May 17, 2002
19,730
24,632
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Chula Vista, South Bay, San Diego, California
A whopping 38 US children die annually from car-related heat-exhaustion, that's .00001% of the population in the US. Go play your world's smallest violin championing some dumb ass pigs attempting to save a doll (NOT A REAL BABY) elsewhere..............

lets see a drug addicted concierge, a 30 something movie theater employee, a fake DJ (prob a foreigner), and an aussie are going to logically explain away and condone US law enforcement inappropriate actions..... only on :siccness: yee

when it comes to a baby in a car. better safe than sorry, imo. are we missing something bro?
 

Arson

Long live the KING!!!!
May 7, 2002
15,796
10,860
113
Police shooting protests help highlight plight of mentally ill in jails


When Michael James Tyree was killed in a San Jose jail cell, his lifeless body found Aug. 27 battered and bruised after an encounter with correctional officers, there were no Twitter hashtags, no spontaneous street protests, no national news vans parked on the curb.

The rise of powerful civil rights movements such as Black Lives Matter -- and the deaths of Michael Brown, Freddie Gray and Eric Garner, all of whom were black -- have steered the national narrative around police force toward the systemic abuse of minority communities.

But the swift and shocking arrests of three Santa Clara County jail guards on suspicion of murder in the death of Tyree, who was white, signals that the heightened focus on police brutality will also raise awareness on a growing crisis confronting another often-ignored part of society -- the mentally ill in our country's jails and prisons.


Protesters participate in a rally Sept. 4, 2015, outside the Santa Clara County Main Jail in the wake of the death of inmate Michael James Tyree. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)

"This may be a signal of how desperate the situation really is," said Michael Romano, director and co-founder of the Stanford Justice Advocacy Project, which partners with the NAACP to lobby for criminal justice reform.

Advocates say the U.S. criminal justice system has failed the mentally ill for decades, treating people struggling with disease, addiction and estrangement from their families like criminals and valuing punishment and obedience more than treatment and rehabilitation.

more here
The Filipino guard was cool to me in my interactions with him, but always gossiping about prisoners with prisoners, causing drama for people. If you had to ask me what guards in Santa clara jail would beat somebody to death, I wouldn’t pick him, I was only there for 8 months, and saw a few people get the business for no fucking good reason, fucking cowards finally went too far.
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
38,734
159,529
113
44
at the welfare mall
The guy should have never even seen a jail cell for petty theft but it sounds like he pleaded no contest in their mental health court so he could get a bed at a mental health facility. After waiting almost a month in jail for one to open up he's dead when if he would have even plead guilty (not saying he should have) he would have more than likely been freed within a few days. Sounds like he actually wanted mental help and that was the only option he had which just goes to show how completely broken our mental health system is. If you even want to call it that, there really isn't any sort of actual system in place. His case was a complete failure before you even get to the fact that he was brutally murder by jail guards.