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Cop Gone Wild
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Written by Advocate   
Saturday, 06 October 2007
48585_3f0kfgpnye_m.jpgCop Gone Wild is a video that is not getting enough attention out there in the community. You can see it online, here is one place.

To make it easier to show to a group, here is a link to a DVD version. It's an ISO disk image file. You will need to burn it to a DVD to play it. We tweaked with the audio a bit, so it's easier on the ears.
Last Updated ( Saturday, 06 December 2008 )
 
Grand jury: Police auditor should get complaints against San Jose cops
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Written by Advocate   
Wednesday, 27 June 2007
Here's an article in the SJMN thats of interest. Chuck Reed is a businessman they just elected to Mayor of San Jose. Good work by Barbara Attard for pressing the issue. It takes great courage to go toe to toe with the police in the courtroom.
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The Santa Clara County Civil Grand Jury recommended today that complaints about San Jose police officers be first handed over to the city's independent police auditor, entering into a dispute between the department and its auditor over who should control and classify allegations of officer misconduct.


According to a report released this afternoon, the Grand Jury is concerned that police internal investigators may under-report allegations of misconduct because they are allowed to classify complaints about officers. The auditor's office raised the same objection to the current system - in which police decide which complaints merit outside investigation - at a city council meeting earlier this month.


The council unanimously rejected auditor Barbara Attard's bid for more direct involvement in the department's handling of complaints. But at the June 21 meeting, the council agreed that the current system is problematic.


It unanimously adopted Mayor Chuck Reed's recommendations that direct the department and the IPA to work together to make the system more user friendly. In August the council will cast its final vote on the recommendations, which includes Attard's request that her agency review injuries or deaths followed by an officers use of stun guns.


Polce Sgt. Nick Muyo said the department believes the city council is taking the right approach.


"We felt it would be a conflict of interest for her office to audit investigations they conducted,"  he said, adding that the department believes its system of classification and investigation is fair and thorough.


While the Grand Jury's recommendations also ask the two groups to work together, they go a step further by suggesting that all complaints should be initially filed with the auditor rather than the police.

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NOTE: The next day, another article was written titled

Grand jury: Reform how cops handle complaints
PANEL SAYS MANY WARY OF REPORTING MISCONDUCT

That article follows below:

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 15 August 2007 )
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Policing the Force and Video
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Written by Advocate   
Wednesday, 06 June 2007

Take a moment to watch this fascinating PBS video which shows specific examples of the need for police oversight (and hence accountability) in our current justice system. The video aired on PBS digital TV as part of the "AIR" America's Investigative Reports journalism series.


Originally recorded from digital TV, the video has been cropped and encoded in xvid. The two channel audio is dolby ac3.


To download the digital video file, click on this link , download and save the file somewhere on your computer (such as your desktop). Depending on your Internet connection, it will take anywhere from a couple of minutes to an hour or so to finish downloading. Once the program is on your computer, simply double clicking on the file should start Windows Media Player. Feel free to show and distribute the video to your friends and loved ones.


If you don't get a picture, you probably need to download and install the xvid video codec. Click here to be taken to the xvid website.


If you don't get any sound, you probably need to download and install the AC3 codec. Click here to be taken to the ac3filter website.


Please everyone support PBS so they can continue to provide other fine documentaries for our future generations.


From the PBS website :


In 1999, the Los Angeles Police Department was engulfed by a scandal that one city council member dubbed "the worst man-made disaster" in the city's history. Two reporters for the LOS ANGELES TIMES, Scott Glover and Matt Lait, filed hundreds of articles on the widespread police corruption that involved beatings, framings and cover-ups by the department's anti-gang unit CRASH in the Rampart division. But as the Rampart scandal receded from national attention, the investigative duo only dug deeper into the L.A.P.D.'s suspect record of policing itself. "Policing the Force" details their discoveries, including sanitized official reports of police shootings and the revelation that a small number of officers tended to be repeat shooters.


Last Updated ( Wednesday, 15 August 2007 )
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