> The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Sacramento asks a judge to order a jury trial for the arresting deputies<p>This is the heart of the issue.<p>Most police don't believe there is any accountability, even if they are good police who always do the right thing.<p>Most, of course, will always try to do the right thing, but those who don't try are rarely weeded out of the system. This, of course, is enabled by the otherwise good people who are part of the criminal justice system: the police, prosecutors, and even, someitmes, judges who allow criminal behavior to go unpunished, and regularly object to attempts at accountaility.<p>This explains the impulse to tear it all down, in my opinion. The overwhelming support for the very few criminals who abuse their power puts the entire system into question.
"Porter was jailed overnight on suspicion of resisting arrest, but never charged." How is this legal? You get pulled over and held for no reason other than asking why you were pulled over?<p>Combine that with the fact that the officer thinks it okay to knock a woman unconscious for no reason, blatantly lie about it and face essentially no repercussions besides maybe going to a new department a town over. How can policing in America <i>actually</i> get improved during our generation?
search youtube for 'first amendment audit'...cops pull these sort of shenanigans fairly frequently, but with all sorts of citizens of all races and genders...the first amendment auditors wear cameras and record such shenanigans
We should never become jaded to these horrifying stories. Cops assaulting and injuring a woman for no reason at all, and then lying about it. This would not have happened if she were white, but apparently Solano County sheriffs have declared open season on Black people.
Does it matter that she is a software engineer? The original article only made a passing comment of her profession. This behavior abhorrent and clearly racially motivated. Full stop!