Being Black in America is like being married to a rich abusive Husband. You can live a good life but you also could be beaten or killed at any time and if you complain you’re told you need to be grateful. 40yrs later and we’re still having the same conversations.
& 40 years later, internal affairs treats these acts the same. I'd bet those officers were suspended with pay during the investigation & never faced a criminal charge. SMH
Instead of asking "who polices the police" people should ask "Who created the police?" The police have fabulous stories in Baltimore's past that even include the Police Commissioner getting imprisoned at Fort McHenry by the President.
Yup no cameras back then like today. Just imagine the police brutality against the public back then. Police brutality continues today and police don’t care if there is a camera recording. Brutality is a cultural attitude amongst the police departments. Attitudes reflect leadership.
I had to tell my 8 year old daughter that police brutality started wayyy long before George Floyd and thanks goodness for cell phone cameras now. It helps some
Being Black in America is like being married to a rich abusive Husband. You can live a good life but you also could be beaten or killed at any time and if you complain you’re told you need to be grateful. 40yrs later and we’re still having the same conversations.
& 40 years later, internal affairs treats these acts the same. I'd bet those officers were suspended with pay during the investigation & never faced a criminal charge. SMH
40 years later and the black community still acting the same way you bring it onto yourself.
@@ottomueller4425 how did he bring that upon himself?
Instead of asking "who polices the police" people should ask "Who created the police?"
The police have fabulous stories in Baltimore's past that even include the Police Commissioner getting imprisoned at Fort McHenry by the President.
Thanks buddy
Please do tell👀. I love all kinds of Baltimore history🥰
Yup no cameras back then like today. Just imagine the police brutality against the public back then.
Police brutality continues today and police don’t care if there is a camera recording.
Brutality is a cultural attitude amongst the police departments.
Attitudes reflect leadership.
I had to tell my 8 year old daughter that police brutality started wayyy long before George Floyd and thanks goodness for cell phone cameras now. It helps some
They need to start cracking more heads in that city that is all they understand you make it what it is.