This is a national problem. News story after news story is available for similar cases of abusive LEOs moving from one job to another without anyone knowing about their past. Such officers, or thugs in reality, put lives at danger, and their employers do as well by more often than not clearing them of any wrongdoing, rather saying, they followied their training.
Coffee City, Texas will forever be an internet sensation. The corruption was so bad that they had to shut down the whole police department!! Absolutely mind boggling..
This *EXACT* thing also happens in school districts all over Texas (and I’m sure the country). Teachers, coaches, admin, etc. get caught doing things they shouldn’t like stealing money, having inappropriate relationships with students, affairs in the workplace, assaulting students, and other things, and instead of being fired and reported, which would make the district look bad, they cut a deal to resign so the district can save face and the person can go work at another district.
@@perc3136 plenty. In many places, it goes unreported so the district doesn’t look bad. Just resign and leave the district so it’s not our problem. It’s funny that people believe the same type of corruption in the world isn’t possible in education.
Its been done and did not fix it....Qualified immunity is not the problem. The problem is the system covering up for other players in the system. Qualified Immunity is not supposed to protect officers from gross negligence or criminal acts. It is only supposed to protect them from petty issues(i.e they lawfully pull someone out of a car and something breaks...you can't sue them) or minor mistakes( i.e someone reasonably matches a description and they detain you to investigate. You can't sue them for wrongful imprisonment.) It is NOT supposed to protect an officer who mistakes an acorn falling as a gun discharge and mag dumps into his own car at an innocent man.
CIVILIAN police officers get FIRED or dismissed. NOT discharged. Have a space to explain why an officer left for reasons other than medical, retirement or joining a different law agency. A 4th box for resignations. Some do, when not under a cloud, and take up another line of work.
Something like this should be reserved for really serious stuff: Things like excessive force, blatant disregard for the Constitution, or being on the take. Being a cop is a career. It's what they do. Imagine if you went to mechanic school, and all of a sudden you could never fix cars again because one customer's car broke down soon after you fixed it. Cops have mouths to feed at home just like the rest of us.
It pretty simple ! Don'tbreak the law and don't violate peoples right !! Oh and another thing we need to know the names of all the Police Officers who have been train in israeli tacktics so that they can be re-trained or banned from ever being in law inforcement again in the total US OF A ! LEARN TO CODE !!!
@@stuckgrenadepin.225 Which is why I included Constitutional rights in my statement. You're in such a hurry to disagree with me, you're not even reading.
believe me, public safety is a tough, thankless job and I am a believer in second chances. you interact with problem people all day, ever day and ONE incident doesn't cancel years or decades of service. (unless it's so over to top criminal charges are coming, in which case it goes to a whole other LEVEL of solution). what dept.s need to do and any society needs to do is recognize, recruit, and make this type of public service an honorable path in life. it's real easy to point fingers and blame game.
Ahh yes we should abesoultely give them a break because we all know they will definitely cut us a break and give us a second chance.... why is it only second chances for law enforcement and not the rest of us.
Can't or won't pull their licenses! Protecting the Brotherhood.
Of course they are protecting their own !
You mean protecting the *BLUE GANG MEMBERS?*
Wandering Criminals !
This is a national problem. News story after news story is available for similar cases of abusive LEOs moving from one job to another without anyone knowing about their past. Such officers, or thugs in reality, put lives at danger, and their employers do as well by more often than not clearing them of any wrongdoing, rather saying, they followied their training.
Coffee City, Texas will forever be an internet sensation.
The corruption was so bad that they had to shut down the whole police department!!
Absolutely mind boggling..
This *EXACT* thing also happens in school districts all over Texas (and I’m sure the country). Teachers, coaches, admin, etc. get caught doing things they shouldn’t like stealing money, having inappropriate relationships with students, affairs in the workplace, assaulting students, and other things, and instead of being fired and reported, which would make the district look bad, they cut a deal to resign so the district can save face and the person can go work at another district.
Any examples of teachers having relationships with students and still getting a job somewhere else ?? I doubt that's the case.
@@perc3136 plenty. In many places, it goes unreported so the district doesn’t look bad. Just resign and leave the district so it’s not our problem.
It’s funny that people believe the same type of corruption in the world isn’t possible in education.
Small town cops are usually the worst. They can't cut it in the big cities, so they apply in the small towns where requirements aren't as high!
I’ve seen cops do wrong here and there and go to somewhere else and do the same things that got them fired at another agency.
No worries. If they continue to refuse to fix the problem, the public eventually will.
Its called "Business as usual"...
End qualified immunity problems solved.
Its been done and did not fix it....Qualified immunity is not the problem. The problem is the system covering up for other players in the system. Qualified Immunity is not supposed to protect officers from gross negligence or criminal acts. It is only supposed to protect them from petty issues(i.e they lawfully pull someone out of a car and something breaks...you can't sue them) or minor mistakes( i.e someone reasonably matches a description and they detain you to investigate. You can't sue them for wrongful imprisonment.)
It is NOT supposed to protect an officer who mistakes an acorn falling as a gun discharge and mag dumps into his own car at an innocent man.
Finally I hear today a law that makes sense!
CIVILIAN police officers get FIRED or dismissed. NOT discharged. Have a space to explain why an officer left for reasons other than medical, retirement or joining a different law agency. A 4th box for resignations. Some do, when not under a cloud, and take up another line of work.
The system isn’t broken, it’s working exactly as it was designed to be.
Career criminals do this daily, what's the problem? Why doesn't the police officers have the same rehabilitation?
It’s the Wild West all over again
The look on the guy at the end i agree with will see!!! The lying on his face says it all
Why isn't there a public data base of wandering offices?
They've already found away around that
Fix it
AMAZING
NOT SURPRISED!!!!!! MATHEWS COUNTY,VA.
🙌
okay
Great... Another meaningless piece of paper the accomplishes absolutely nothing. Tf?! 🙄
Something like this should be reserved for really serious stuff: Things like excessive force, blatant disregard for the Constitution, or being on the take. Being a cop is a career. It's what they do. Imagine if you went to mechanic school, and all of a sudden you could never fix cars again because one customer's car broke down soon after you fixed it. Cops have mouths to feed at home just like the rest of us.
It pretty simple ! Don'tbreak the law and don't violate peoples right !! Oh and another thing we need to know the names of all the Police Officers who have been train in israeli tacktics so that they can be re-trained or banned from ever being in law inforcement again in the total US OF A ! LEARN TO CODE !!!
No. Patterns of behavior that show a willingness to violate rights is just as bad as, if not worse than, one that uses excessive force a single time.
@@stuckgrenadepin.225 Which is why I included Constitutional rights in my statement. You're in such a hurry to disagree with me, you're not even reading.
believe me, public safety is a tough, thankless job and I am a believer in second chances. you interact with problem people all day, ever day and ONE incident doesn't cancel years or decades of service. (unless it's so over to top criminal charges are coming, in which case it goes to a whole other LEVEL of solution). what dept.s need to do and any society needs to do is recognize, recruit, and make this type of public service an honorable path in life. it's real easy to point fingers and blame game.
Ahh yes we should abesoultely give them a break because we all know they will definitely cut us a break and give us a second chance.... why is it only second chances for law enforcement and not the rest of us.
Because they are not on our side !@@joekev27