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DiManno: New tape backs up protester’s beating allegation

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CHIMO Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-10-10 09:10 PM
Original message
DiManno: New tape backs up protester’s beating allegation
When he is finally allowed up off the ground after being stomped and pummeled by cops, Adam Nobody appears to have suffered no significant facial injuries — at least none that show.

There isn’t any blood, nary evidence of wounds, and the nose — which Nobody suspects was snapped during that pile-on melee — is exactly where it’s supposed to be.

The outward evidence is fairly clear on a piece of footage given to the Star this week.

Those images — a handcuffed Nobody being led out of camera range by uniformed officers, in the process of being arrested last June 26, not a drop of blood on him — support the 27-year-old’s formal complaint that he was immediately afterwards subjected to another vicious beating by a couple of plainclothes detectives behind two parked police vans.

http://www.thestar.com/news/article/905568--dimanno-new-tape-backs-up-protester-s-beating-allegation?bn=1
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JohnyCanuck Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-11-10 09:00 AM
Response to Original message
1. Corrupt language corrupts minds: police are civilians, under the control of civilians
By David J. Climenhaga

snip

Let us consider the important proper distinction that the media, police and many of the rest of us nowadays fail to make between the terms "civilian" and … what exactly? Well, in civil society -- using that term in its technical sense -- the distinction is between "civilian" and "military."

This would have been obvious to any minimally educated person only a generation or two ago.

snip

This happened in North America -- first in the United States, of course -- when civilian police departments began to think of themselves as militarized occupation forces, there not to enforce the law but to exert the will of the powerful. Soon after, many police began to make a distinction in their jargon between themselves and "civilians."

This was quickly picked up by police reporters -- that most toadying class of journalist -- and now it has "officially" entered the language. At least, it is official enough to satisfy the editors of the Canadian Press, and worse, of the Oxford Canadian Dictionary. Thus, states the latter: "civilian … a person not in the armed forces or the police force. …" (Emphasis added.)

This is a corruption, and a corrupting corruption, since the simple fact is that municipal police are civilians, charged only with enforcing the law, subject themselves to the rule of law, and properly described as public servants.

http://www.rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/djclimenhaga/2010/12/corrupt-language-corrupts-minds-police-are-civilians-under-contr

Wake up: Arbitrary rule is all around us
By James Laxer

snip

In Ontario, the Special Investigations Unit that reviews complaints against police has released a report that concludes that in two specific cases during the G20 summit in Toronto last June, excessive force was used. But just when it appears that the system might work and deliver some semblance of justice, that hope is instantly dashed.

SIU director Ian Scott has concluded that the offending officers cannot be identified and, therefore, cannot be charged. In the case of one man who was arrested, and sustained a fracture below his right eye, the SIU determined that the police used excessive force. But the badge number on the man's arrest sheet did not correspond to the assigned badge number of any Toronto police officer. Even Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair has acknowledged that up to 90 officers were not wearing their name-tags during the summit weekend. He says he will discipline the officers who chose to make themselves unidentifiable, but they are not being charged with an offence.

The only conclusion we can reasonably draw is that a large number of officers were out of control during the policing of the summit. Because the police won't come forward to testify against their fellow officers, the cover up works. Officers who assault people on the street, even when the assaults are videoed, get away with it because follow officers won't say a word against them. When the police act more like a gang of thugs than like professionals who uphold a set of standards, they become untrustworthy, a force that neither serves nor protects.

And what do those in charge do about this? Next to nothing.

http://www.rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/james-laxer/2010/11/wake-arbitrary-rule-all-around-us
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JohnyCanuck Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-11-10 08:48 PM
Response to Original message
2. Activist Communiqué: Adam Nobody vs. the Toronto Police
http://rabble.ca/sites/rabble/files/imagecache/preview/node-images/adam+nobody+beatdown.jpg

In this week's saga to identify the police officer(s) who beat demonstrator Adam Nobody - and hold Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair accountable for the actions of his officers - Toronto police now claim they know the names of the officers involved and who had witnessed Nobody's take down and subsequent beating at Queen's Park on Saturday June 26, 2010.

Adam Nobody (yes, his real name) was participating in the G20 Summit protests that shook Toronto in late June of this year. I have included video of his takedown by police at the bottom on this article. Please note that Adam Nobody claims he received the worst beating afterwards.

The above image released by www.G20justice.com is one of the officers who allegedly beat Adam Nobody. You will note that he was badgeless and his identity is still unknown to the public, but he was hopefully one of the officers disciplined and docked a day's pay for doing so. Police will not release his or any name(s) until (if) he is criminally charged.

Now that police are able to identify which officer(s) beat Adam Nobody, the Toronto Police Special Investigation Unit (SIU) can now continue its investigation into his beating and determine if criminal charges can be laid against the officer(s) involved. The maximum penalty under the Police Act is loss of employment.

http://rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/krystalline-kraus/2010/12/activist-communiqu%C3%A9-adam-nobody-vs-toronto-police
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CHIMO Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-11-10 09:02 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Too Wrong Too Late
McGuinty shifts focus to fixing G20 law

Overhauling an archaic law that was used to undermine Torontonians’ civil rights during the G20 is more important than merely casting blame for the debacle, says Premier Dalton McGuinty.

Under fire for revelations in Ombudsman André Marin’s report into why the province secretly enacted a regulation police used during the June 26-27 summit, McGuinty stressed “there’s a broader issue at play here . . . that’s the important thing.”

The premier said fixing the 1939 Public Works Protection Act — not just dissecting regulation 233/10, which his cabinet quietly passed at the request of Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair weeks before the summit — is critical.

“The issue is whether it’s appropriate given our present-day values and given an old law, which I am confident doesn’t strike the balance that you and I would want today in terms of public safety and individual freedom of expression,” McGuinty told reporters Friday in London.

http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/905436--mcguinty-shifts-focus-to-fixing-g20-law?bn=1

He is out in the world that Ford has a mandate to remove. Doesn't matter that he calls himself a Liberal. He is a Harper Con in his actions. So it is up to the voters to bring in people that will bring back representation. Too bad McGuinty. You served your time.
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JohnyCanuck Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-13-10 06:32 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. The Ontario government vs. The Toronto Police

Ding Ding!

This is a real he said / he said battle between McGuinty's Ontario government and Chief Bill Blair's Toronto police, regarding the G20 secret law/act that never was.

SNIP

Marin statement: "It is important when considering this information to understand that while there may have been only two arrests using Regulation 233/10, many people were detained, searched, questioned, and redirected under its authority. That regulation played a huge role in the violations of civil liberties that occurred. Arrests were only a small part of it."

SNIP

"The report 'Caught in the Act' released by Ontario Provincial Ombudsman Andre Marin yesterday further confirms the illegitimacy of arrests and charges stemming from the G20. The report documents the callous disregard for residents of Toronto shown by multiple levels of government and the Police.

'They evoked wartime legislation and knowingly misled the public to extend their powers to conduct the largest mass arrest in Canadian history and commit countless assaults' said Sonja Killoran-McKibbin, member of the Community Solidarity Network (CSN). Hundreds were detained and illegally searched, homes of community organizers were raided while others were picked off the streets and put into unmarked vans. Many continue to face political targeting through continued arrests and egregious bail restrictions.

As is evidenced clearly in the report, the Police and the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services colluded and acted with presumed immunity. 'Those responsible must be held directly accountable for these abuses. The Ministry granted the police extravagant powers and actively worked to keep the public uninformed while the police carried out a campaign of misinformation' added Jessica Denyer, also a member of the CSN."

http://rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/krystalline-kraus/2010/12/activist-communiqu%C3%A9-ontario-government-vs-toronto-police
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JohnyCanuck Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-14-10 04:24 PM
Response to Original message
5. Video:Toronto Police Chief Blair now feeling the heat?
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notesdev Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-21-10 05:44 PM
Response to Original message
6. Where's this guy when you need him?
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CHIMO Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-21-10 07:10 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. We Don't Need
Him in our land.

He would be Harper's god sent.

Keep him where he belongs.
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