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View Full Version : What constitutes a crime by a police officer



cajunrevenge
01-15-2017, 04:20 PM
https://shadowproof.com/2017/01/13/chicago-police-justice-department-report-code-of-silence/


The DOJ report link is in the article. My question is what constitutes a criminal act by a police officer. I keep reading these DOJ reports showing massive widespread abuses yet rarely is a criminal charges filed. Why isn't violating someone's constitutional rights a crime? Why aren't officers charged for filing false police reports? Why aren't officers charged with destruction of evidence if they destroy video evidence. Why aren't officers charged for helping other officers cover up their crimes? Why isn't an officer charged if the specifically tell an officer to target a specific ethnicity. Where were the good cops during all this? If an officer lies under oath is he not guilty of purgury? Is an officer a good officer if he sees criminal actions by fellow police officers and says nothing?




The most damming thing to me are Chicago police saying they feared they would be murdered if they snitched. What is this the mafia? The worst part is that the code of silence is entirely created by police officers. Any police officer that thinks deserves violence against them for trying to uphold the law is not a law officer, they are just thugs with a badge and a gun. I understand not wanting people to snitch but not when you are supposed to be law enforcement.

AerchAngel
01-16-2017, 09:38 AM
See Steven Seagal Above the Law