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POLICE RAPE MAN ON SIDE OF ROAD
If roadside rape ok with you, then keep paying politicians for it.
If you don’t think paying for roadside anal rape of your family, friends or neighbors is something you want to be a part of, then stop paying politicians for it.
A private security service will gladly offer much better service at a much lower rate. – VP
Two white Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office deputies were placed on paid administrative leave ahead of the release Friday of dashcam footage that showed them punching, kicking and stripping the pants off of a handcuffed black man who they body-cavity searched on the side of a road.
During a news conference Friday, District Attorney General Neal Pinkston said he asked the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and Gov. Bill Lee to look into the alleged brutality as he stood alongside Sheriff Jim Hammond, who said he would “stand by his men in terms of their ability and their training.”
After Pinkston’s office released the dashcam footage, Chattanooga City Councilman Russell Gilbert described the footage as reminiscent of “the slave era” and said the deputies need to be fired and prosecuted.
“Last year, we stood at this same position and you guys pretty well said the same thing that you did now,” NAACP member Dwight Smith said to Hammond, referring to the December 2018 arrest of Charles Toney Jr., a 25-year-old black man who was punched and kicked by Hammond’s white deputy, Blake Kilpatrick, while handcuffed. “I can record it and it sounds exactly the same as last year. You say you have good officers. If you do, why do these officers engage in this kind of behavior?”
Deputies can “strip search” a suspect, according to a copy of the sheriff’s policy implemented in 2014.
That’s where deputies can ask an arrested person to remove or arrange their clothes to “permit a visual inspection of the genitals, buttocks, anus, female breasts, or undergarments.” But a body cavity search takes it one step further and involves probing these body parts. Not only can deputies not conduct them unless they have a search warrant or specific written consent, but a licensed physician or nurse is supposed to do the body cavity examination in a “controlled and private environment,” according to the policy, which is based on state law.
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