DOJ exposes massivel kidnapping and sexual assault operation in Louisiana.

cajunrevenge

Well-known member
http://reason.com/blog/2016/12/30/meet-the-community-in-louisiana-where-po/?&=7

The DOJ report link is in the article. I am going to copy/paste the most important parts.

After engaging in a thorough investigation, the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) concludes

that there is reasonable cause to believe that both the Ville Platte, Louisiana Police Department

(“VPPD”) and the Evangeline Parish Sheriff’s Office (“EPSO”) have engaged in a pattern or

practice of unconstitutional conduct.1

Both VPPD and EPSO have arrested and held people in

jail—without obtaining a warrant and without probable cause to believe that the detained

individuals had committed a crime—in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.

We have additional concerns that these unconstitutional holds have led to coerced confessions

and improper criminal convictions. These findings reflect the results of an investigation into both

agencies, which have engaged in nearly identical practices within overlapping jurisdictional

boundaries.

VPPD and EPSO have used these arrests, called “investigative holds,” as a regular part of

their criminal investigations, inducing people to provide information to officers under threat of

continued wrongful incarceration. The arrests include individuals suspected (without sufficient

evidence) of committing crimes, as well as their family members and potential witnesses. The

individuals who are improperly arrested are strip-searched, placed in holding cells without beds,

toilets, or showers, and denied communication with family members and loved ones. Individuals

are commonly detained for 72 hours or more without being provided an opportunity to contest

their arrest and detention.
Instead, they are held and questioned until they either provide

information or the law enforcement agency determines that they do not have information related

to a crime. Indeed, we have concerns that some people may have confessed to crimes or

provided information sought by EPSO and VPPD detectives, apparently to end this secret and

indefinite confinement.

The investigative hold practice is routine at EPSO and VPPD. Both agencies

acknowledged that they used holds to investigate criminal activity for as long as anyone at the

agency can remember. The number of holds used in recent years is staggering. Between 2012

and 2014, for example, EPSO initiated over 200 arrests where the only documented reason for

arrest was an investigative hold. In that same period, VPPD used the practice more than 700

times. The number of holds by EPSO and VPPD is likely even higher; both agencies use such

rudimentary arrest documentation systems that the total number of arrests for investigative hold

purposes is likely underreported.

After the DOJ began its investigation into VPPD and EPSO’s use of investigative holds

in April 2015, leadership of VPPD, EPSO and the City of Ville Platte admitted that the holds are

unconstitutional
and have taken laudable steps to begin eliminating their use. More work

remains to be done. The agencies’ policies, procedures, training, and data collection and

accountability systems must ensure that investigative holds are eliminated permanently. The

agencies also must work to repair community trust, because many people may still be justifiably

reluctant to provide information to law enforcement for fear that doing so could subject them to

an unconstitutional detention.


EPSO and VPPD violate the Fourth Amendment by arresting and detaining individuals

without a warrant or probable cause. The Fourth Amendment prohibits “unreasonable searches

and seizures” and requires that warrants be based on “probable cause.” U.S. Const. Amend. IV.

All significant restraints on liberty must be supported by probable cause, whether or not law

enforcement officers call the restraint a formal arrest. Dunaway v. New York, 442 U.S. 200,

207-13 (1979) (police detectives violated Fourth Amendment where, lacking probable cause,

they instructed officers to “pick up” an individual and “bring him in” for questioning rather than

making an “arrest”). Indeed, “there can be little doubt” that the Fourth Amendment’s probable

cause requirement applies where suspects are “involuntarily taken to the police station.”

Police may satisfy the probable cause requirement in either of two ways: (1) an officer

may obtain a warrant prior to arrest by presenting information of probable cause to a judge; or

(2) an officer may determine that probable cause exists in the field. Gerstein v. Pugh, 420 U.S.

103, 113-14 (1975). When a suspect is arrested without a warrant a neutral magistrate must

verify probable cause as soon as reasonably possible and no later than 48 hours after arrest,

absent an emergency or other extraordinary circumstances. Riverside v. McLaughlin, 500 U.S.

44, 56-59 (1991). Consistent with constitutional requirements, the Louisiana Code of Criminal

Procedure requires probable cause determinations within 48 hours of a warrantless arrest. La.

Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 230.2 (2013). The investigative hold practices employed by EPSO

and VPPD contravene these requirements.

Nor is the investigative hold practice permissible under an exception for holding material

witnesses. A material witness may be detained under Louisiana law only if a judge issues a

warrant after a showing that the witness is both “essential to the prosecution or defense” and that

it is “impracticable” to merely issue a subpoena. La Rev. Stat. Ann. § 15:257 (2013).7

The Fourth Amendment similarly limits detention of material witnesses to situations in which the

government “establish[es] probable cause to believe that (1) the witness’s testimony is material,

and (2) it may become impracticable to secure the presence of the witness by subpoena.” United

States v. Awadallah, 349 F.3d 42, 64 (2d Cir. 2003). In addition, courts have found prior judicial

approval of material witness detentions to be of critical importance. See, e.g., Schneyder v.

Smith, 653 F.3d 313, 328-29 (3d Cir. 2011). The investigative hold practices at EPSO and

VPPD thus are not justified under any conception of material witness detentions. The holds are

made without a warrant, without any showing that the testimony is essential and that obtaining it

via subpoena is impracticable, and without any attempt to obtain prior judicial approval.

EPSO and VPPD officers have used unlawful investigative holds as a regular part of

criminal investigations for more than two decades. Most holds operate as follows: when a

detective at either agency wants to question someone in connection with an ongoing criminal

investigation, the detective instructs a patrol officer to find that individual in the community and

bring him or her in for questioning. The patrol officer commands the individual to ride in a

patrol vehicle to either the City or Parish jail, where pursuant to the jail’s standard procedures,

jail personnel strip-search the individual and place him or her in a holding cell (sometimes

referred to as “the bullpen” at the Parish Jail) until a detective is available to conduct

questioning. At the City Jail, there are two holding cells; both are equipped with a hard metal

bench, and nothing else.


Neither holding cell at the City Jail has a mattress, running water,

shower, or toilet in the cell.

The Parish Jail is similar; the “bullpen” is equipped with only a

long metal bench, and the walls are made of metal grating. EPSO detectives and deputies refer

to the process of detaining a person in the “bullpen” for questioning as “putting them on ice.”

Investigative holds initiated by VPPD often last for 72 hours—and sometimes

significantly longer—forcing detainees to spend multiple nights sleeping on a concrete floor or

metal bench. Indeed, VPPD’s booking logs indicate that, from 2012-2014, several dozen

investigative holds extended for at least a full week. During this time, VPPD exerts control over

the detainees’ liberty: The detained person is not permitted to make phone calls to let family or

employers know where they are, and have access to bathrooms and showers only when taken

into the jail’s general population area.

Similarly, EPSO’s investigative holds often last for three full days. During that time,

detainees are forced to sleep on the Parish Jail’s concrete floor. One EPSO deputy reported that

he saw someone held without a warrant or a probable cause determination for more than six

days. As with VPPD, EPSO also controls the detainee’s liberty. EPSO does not permit

detainees who are “on hold” to make phone calls to let family or employers know their

whereabouts. Indeed, we were told that certain detectives have threatened EPSO jail officers

(referred to as “jailers” in the Parish Jail) with retaliation if the officers allowed detainees to

make phone calls. One EPSO jail officer described an incident in which an EPSO detective

reprimanded him after the jail officer provided toothpaste and other personal supplies to a person

locked in the holding cell.


These investigative holds are not even ostensibly supported by probable cause. Both

EPSO and VPPD detectives acknowledged that they use investigative holds where they lack

sufficient evidence to make an arrest, but instead have a “hunch” or “feeling” that a person may

be involved in criminal activity.
One VPPD officer noted that they use investigative holds

specifically where the officer needs more time to develop evidence to support a lawful arrest.

Similarly, an EPSO detective described using investigative holds when he had “a pretty good

feeling” or a “gut instinct” that a certain individual was connected to a crime.

Instead, officers at both agencies admitted that they use the time that a person is “on

hold” to develop their case, either by gathering evidence or by convincing the detainee to

confess. As one EPSO detective explained, it is easier to “work up” a case and find evidence

while the person suspected of committing the crime is in custody and cannot communicate with

others. A second EPSO detective explained that he has used investigative holds experimentally,

testing whether a crime wave subsides while a particular person is in jail. The detective

explained that if the crimes continue during the hold, the presumably innocent person is released.


Conversely, if the crimes cease during the detention, the detective investigates the person further.

Detectives and officers at VPPD similarly described the hold process as a way to gather

information about cases and buy investigators time to develop probable cause before taking a

detainee in front of a magistrate. VPPD officers explained that holds assist their investigations

by inducing people to talk to investigators and by allowing detectives to gather evidence while

the individual they suspect is in custody and cannot communicate with people on the outside.

Moreover, both agencies confirmed that they used holds to detain individuals whom they did not suspect of any involvement in criminal activity, but who instead were related to suspects, witnessed crimes, or otherwise might have knowledge of criminal activity.

The willingness of officers in both agencies to arrest and detain individuals who are

merely possible witnesses in criminal investigations means that literally anyone in Evangeline

Parish or Ville Platte could be arrested and placed “on hold” at any time.
For example, one

woman told us that VPPD officers detained her and her family in 2014 after a grocery shopping

trip during which they may have witnessed an armed robbery and shooting. The woman was on

her way home with her groceries when a VPPD officer stopped her. She told the officer that she

did not see the robbery and that she had no information about the crime. After she got home and

dropped off her groceries, another VPPD officer came to her house and commanded her to come

to the police station to answer questions. The woman recounted—and Chief Lartigue

confirmed—that the officer took the woman, her boyfriend, and a 16-year old who was staying at

their house into custody at the jail. Officers strip-searched the woman, who was menstruating at

the time, and forced her to remove her tampon. VPPD officers then placed her in custody

overnight—first in a holding cell and then in the Jail’s general population—without access to

sanitary products. According to the woman, roughly nine hours later, VPPD detectives removed

her from detention to question her about the shooting. The district attorney participated in this

interrogation. VPPD officers also held the woman’s boyfriend overnight in a holding cell, and

held the juvenile in a separate holding cell for at least seven hours before releasing him to a

family member. None of these individuals were suspected of having any connection to the

robbery or shooting, yet detectives incarcerated them for significant periods of time before

showing them a line up and asking questions about what they may have witnessed.
The day after

being released, the woman called Chief Lartigue to complain about her treatment. Chief

Lartigue responded that the detention was pursuant to department policy.

A second woman credibly recounted a similar experience. She told us that in 2015 VPPD

officers called her and instructed her to put her children in her truck and drive to the police

station because a detective wanted to question her about an armed robbery. When the woman

arrived at the police station, officers took her two children—ages one and five—from her and

placed them in a holding area. According to the woman, VPPD detectives refused to let her call

a family member to pick up the children and interrogated the five year old outside of the

woman’s presence. Officers eventually permitted the woman’s mother to pick up the children

but kept the woman in custody. The woman asked VPPD officers if she was under arrest and

was told that she was not—but that she could not leave because she was “under investigation.”

The woman spent several days in the holding cell, where she slept on the floor and was refused

the opportunity to shower. According to the woman, after 72 hours, VPPD brought her directly

to the Evangeline Parish Sheriff’s Office where she was booked on charges of armed robbery.

The charges against her were eventually dismissed, but not before local media ran a news story

reporting that she was charged with the crime. To this day, the woman has no idea why VPPD

arrested her in connection with this crime.

 
Oh wait they have badges and just say "oops" and go to a 2 hour training course that explains how you cant just ****ing arrest and torture people at your goddamn leisure. Or maybe they can since no one is being held criminally liable.

Look out its a woman in a wheelchair filming an arrest!

[video=youtube;CuL6I02RE4c]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuL6I02RE4c[/video]
 
Don't worry. Trump is gonna make America great again. I'm sure the civil liberties of the arrested and incarcerated is high on his agenda.
 
What can I do? I voted for Gary Johnson. At this point all I can do is sit back and hope one day another country invades to liberate us.
 
in 18 days or so, they won't have to worry about anything coming of this

this is praised by the abortion of a man that will be the leader of this country
 
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