Lunatic Cops Harass Black Man In Broad Daylight
sex November 12th. 2022, 11:50pmThese cops don’t care about anything as they will harass anyone they please. Rick Strom breaks it down. Give us your thoughts in the comments below!
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The Sheriffâs Office of Pasco County, Florida, harasses people in their own homes using a method they call âpredictive policing.â The program has unfolded like a dystopian nightmare for the Pasco County residents it has ensnared, who have been subjected to near-constant police surveillance and harassment. The Sheriffâs Office claims the programâs goal is to predict and prevent crime before it happens by targeting people they suspect may commit crimes in the future, dubbing the approach âintelligence-led policing.â This euphemism may make it seem like thereâs thoughtfulness to the approach, but thereâs nothing fair or smart about it.
https://ij.org/case/pasco-predictive-policing/
Using a crude computer algorithm, the Sheriffâs Office creates a list of people they think are likely to commit crimes in the future. It places people on the list based on their criminal record, but also based on things that the person may not have been able to control, such as whether they have been suspected of a crime, whether they witnessed a crime or even whether they were a victim of a crime. The Sheriffâs Office calls the people on the list âprolific offenders.â
Then, deputies are sent out to monitor, intimidate and harass people on the list. The deputies are instructed to gather as much information as possible about their targets, and routinely show up unannounced at peopleâs houses to interrogate them about their friends, their families and their comings and goings. Dalanea Taylor, who was placed on the prolific offender list because she had been incarcerated as a teenager, was harassed by Pasco deputies for years after she was released and had turned her life around.
Code enforcement is a favorite tactic for ensuring compliance during the deputiesâ visits. To coerce people into letting the deputies into their home or answering their questionsâor sometimes purely to intimidate themâthe deputies slap their victims with citations for innocuous offenses like missing house numbers on the mailbox, chickens in the back yard or unmowed grass on the lawn. By design, family members of prolific offenders are ensnared by the program too. Robert Jones had a son on the prolific offender list, and Pasco deputies showed up at his door multiple times a week asking about his son. When the deputies decided that he wasnât cooperating fully, they wrote him multiple citations for tall grass and other similar property code violations. They even arrested him several times on bogus charges.
Tammy Heilman and Dolly Deegan, who both had sons on the list, also received multiple citations for thousands of dollars in fines for code enforcement violations.
Worse, the motivation of the program is more sinister than merely âfighting crimeâ: The Sheriffâs Office acknowledged that they want these âproblem peopleâ gone. Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco, the architect of the program, boasted that the goal was to predict which residents are likely to commit crimes and then âtake them out.â In the words of a former Pasco County deputy, they were under orders to â[m]ake their lives miserable until they move or sue.â
Experts on policing have roundly criticized Pasco Countyâs practices, pointing out that it is based on junk science and could tend to reinforce racially biased policing practices.
But the Sheriffâs use of predictive policing is not only methodologically shaky; itâs unconstitutional. The government cannot harass you in your home just because it has decided that you or someone you live with might someday do something wrong. Thatâs why Robert, Dalanea, Tammy, and Dolly have decided to challenge Pascoâs program, alongside the Institute for Justice, in court to affirm the basic principle that there is no such thing as âinnocent until predicted guilty.â
Filmed on a Canon C70. B-cam Canon R5 with RF 70-200 2.8 lens. Drone shots taken on a DJI Mavic 3.
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