Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Ghost Guns Proliferating


"[With most handguns, if police want to work at it, they can usually trace them-- even back to the United States or Europe, wherever they're made."
"But with these [ghost guns], they could change hands multiple times. It can be very, very difficult to figure out where they originated."
Blake Brown, professor, history of firearms control in Canada, Saint Mary's University
 
"This presence [of 3D guns] is consistent with national and international trends observed, where privately made firearms are being used in criminal activity."
"Privately made firearms ... can appeal to individuals intending to use them for criminal purposes since they do not have a serial number and are difficult to trace."
RCMP statement
 
"The best you can do is make possessing 3D printed parts for firearms ... illegal somehow."
"That's still not going to deter people who weren't deterred from shooting other people in the first place."
Rod Giltaca, Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights
An olive green gun sits on a table with a 3D printer behind it. The 3D printer has a grey firearm on it.
Calgary police have seized 17 3D-printed firearms this year. Previously, they had seized only one. (Calgary Police Service)

Ghost guns are simple to produce, hard to trace and are becoming ubiquitous at crime scenes in North America. These are firearms lacking serial numbers, assembled from individual parts or 3D printers. Canada's federal policing body has not yet seen fit to maintain a database on these 3D firearms, or on printers -- much less how many shootings have occurred with the use of the weapons. It has, however laid charges in a number of cases where 3D guns were seized. 3D print files are available for producing a range of firearms, including assault rifles.

There are reports the RCMP claims to be "anecdotally" aware of, regarding ghost gun seizures in Canada, but they report, they "do not collect statistics on this". According to Professor Brown, whose study expertise is the history of Canadian firearms control, national and regional statistics should be kept with respect to the number of 3D-printed weapons seized, where and on what occasion. Lack of data makes it more difficult to generate basic facts.
 
A man holds an orange 3D printed firearm. The firearm is in focus, the man is not.
Wisconsin-based gun designer Ethan Middleton shows a firearm he printed and assembled in less than a day. (Ousama Farag/CBC)
 
Ghost gun manufacturers and distributors might face discouragement, Professor Brown suggests, should they face stiffer criminal penalties. The presence of these firearms has been a growing concern of police continent-wide. An anti-gun unit based in Quebec, this year along with RCMP, arearrested 45 people, seizing 440 guns in raids targeting makers of 3D-printed firearms in eight provinces: Quebec, Ontario Alberta, British Columbia, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Manitoba and Saskatchewan.
 
A coroner's inquest heard last month that weapons used to murder three people in the Montreal area in August 2022 were homemade by the killer, who shot at random. The U.S. Justice Department informed the Supreme Court that local law enforcement agencies seized over 19,000 ghost guns at crime scenes in 2021, over a tenfold increase in just a five-year period.

Canada, noted Professor Brown, maintains rigorous regulations on firearms, in particular handguns, but 3D-printed guns bypass regulations since they are absent serial numbers. According to experts, it's relatively easy for anyone to produce a gun. It takes a 3D printer which uses a laser to secrete a liquid resin that hardens to form the gun parts, and instructions for its use, found readily online. 
 
There is nothing in the Firearms Act or other associated laws to prohibit anyone from possessing a digital blueprint for a 3D-printed gun, although possession of the firearm sans licence and registration certificate can lead to weapons seizure and criminal charges.


A man in a blue blazer with a grey sweater stands behind a table with guns on it. Some are brightly coloured.
Ben Lawson, acting staff sergeant of the Calgary Police Service's Firearms Investigative Unit, shows 3D-printed firearms that were seized by his unit. (Ellen Mauro/CBC)

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Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Miscalculating Afghanistan : The Past Assuming the Future

"I stand squarely behind my decision."
"If anything, the developments of the past week reinforce that ending US military involvement in Afghanistan now was the right decision. "
"American troops cannot and should not be fighting in a war and dying in a war that Afghan forces are not willing to fight for themselves."
U.S. President Joe Biden
Afghan passengers wait to leave the Kabul airport on August 16, a day after the Taliban captured the city [Wakil Kohsar/AFP]

Chaos is total in Kabul as the capital -- as expected but within a shorter time-frame than even the most pessimistic of analysts could have expected --  fell into the hands of the Taliban, swiftly declaring themselves the new government of Afghanistan. Afghans lost no time leaving the city, where thousands had entered earlier desperately fleeing from surrounding towns, villages and cities as they were first taken by the Taliban, hoping to find refuge and safety in the country's capital city.

As soon as the Taliban entered Kabul, Afghans streamed out of the city, walking the desperate distance to the Hamid Karzai international airport at Kabul where planes from international destinations were landing to evacuate their nationals as diplomatic missions emptied their embassies, planning to fly their citizens to safety back home. Afghans hoped that they too would be included in the evacuation process. Many of whom had worked with, had collaborated with, NATO member-countries as interpreters.

Most countries had indicated, after all, the responsibility to provide a safe haven to those Afghan nationals who had worked alongside them, including those locally engaged to work at the embassies, all of whom had the certain knowledge that they and their families would become targets of the Taliban. Some so desperate to escape that they ran after planes taxiing along runways, clinging to the planes and at lift-off, falling to their death.
 
Hundreds of Afghan people run alongside a U.S. Air Force plane, with some climbing on it, as it moves down a runway at the international airport in Kabul, Afghanistan on Monday. (The Associated Press)

Their eventual fate is known, it has been acknowledged that those Afghans wherever they live in the country, wherever foreign troops were stationed, who worked as base cleaners, administrative clerks, interpreters, in any capacity whatever, were slated for revenge attacks by the Taliban whose fearsome reputation for atrocities escaped no one's notice. With that knowledge, in the expectation that it would yet take time before the Taliban succeeded in taking the country in its entirety, foreign governments fiddled with administrative niceties rather than flying those vulnerable Afghans and their families out to safety and absorption abroad as immigrant.
 
Thousands of people packed into the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Monday, rushing the tarmac and pushing onto planes in desperate attempts to flee the country after the Taliban overthrew the Western-backed government. Here, people climb atop a plane as they wait at the airport. (Wakil Kohsar/AFP/Getty Images)

The Taliban leadership initially claimed it had no interest in entering Kabul until it had completed the process of forming a transitional government. That declaration was soon upended, by the decision to physically occupy the city, sending in the 'fighters'; the purpose of which it was explained was to "prevent chaos and looting". Both of which, needless to say, are hallmarks of the Taliban mode of operation; the chaos they sow ensures that opposition will melt away out of raw fear, and the plundering is the Taliban reward.
 
Taliban fighters take control of the Afghan presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, after the president fled the country on Sunday. (Zabi Karimi/The Associated Press)
 
There was no opposition when the Taliban reached Kabul's outskirts. Both the national police and the Afghan military melted out of sight, evaporated, left for greener pastures they might defend -- or not. With no defences, no opposition, no problems, the country fell to the Taliban just as Iraq fell to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant when Iraqi security forces panicked and fled, leaving ISIL to establish and enlarge its caliphate at will, just as the Taliban are now doing; returning the past to the future.
"I don't want to be owned by anyone. I want to stand on my own two feet. I love my country and we are the next generation of Afghans taking a step into the modern world."
"I went to work this morning and there were no police or soldiers at any of the usual checkpoints and no one in the office so I came home."
"The streets were full of people trying to get home to their families. No one knows what to do."
"I am afraid I will be kidnapped, imprisoned and raped for being a soldier. I am afraid for my future and for my family."
Kubra Behroz, 33, mother of two, officer cadet member of the Afghan National Army
'I'm scared I'll be raped and killed': Afghanistan's female soldiers fear for their lives
Women who joined the Afghan National Army amid a western backed campaign now fear the Taliban will kill or rape them for being soldiers Kubra Behroz, who served in the Afghan National Army,
 
She became an officer cadet in 2011. It gave her pride as a woman and an Afghan to work alongside men as a member of her country's national army. She felt her life had a purpose and that purpose was to help protect her country and her people. Other recruits, Pashtun males, regarded her with amused contempt. The Taliban is comprised of Pashtuns, the majority ethnics of the country, though they are now encouraging other ethnic groups to join the Taliban. When Hamid Karzai was president, he spoke of the Pashtuns, the Taliban as his 'brothers'.

She fears for her future with good reason.  When the Taliban ruled Afghanistan twenty years ago, women were not permitted to exit their homes without a male guardian accompanying them, and the women were expected to wear burqas with full face coverings. Girls were not permitted to attend school. During the presence of foreign troops, NGOs and institutions in Afghanistan, schools were built for all children to attend school. The Taliban burnt them down. 

Women were not permitted to work. Hospitals were for men only. Women could only attend hospitals meant for women, and female surgeons too, even in the operating room, were forced to wear full burqas. The Taliban now solemnly declare in the absence of any opposition to their conquest of the country, that girls will be permitted to attend school, that women will not be forced to leave their jobs. Afghans know differently from their own experience. Owners of beauty parlours have painted over their windows; music shops have boarded up doors and windows, destroyed their equipment.

At work Kubra Behroz and her female co-workers have been warned by their male colleagues that they are in extreme danger, taunting the women. "They say the Taliban will cut off our heads if they find us", said Behroz whose brother, a soldier who was wounded in the fighting in Ghazni province last week, informed her of two women having been beheaded who had been police officers four years earlier. Reports are circulating of Taliban soldiers raping women and young girls, declaring 'marriage'.

When a senior Taliban was interviewed he insisted that everyone would be treated well, women would not lose all their recent gains, under Sharia. The very Islamic laws that permit such 'temporary' marriages that rape is viewed as. A girl or woman who is raped is expected to 'marry' her rapist by custom and tradition, or face being ostracized as one whose behaviour 'shames' her family and community.

Even at the best of times, when women were released from the fanatical strictures of the Taliban in their adherence to sharia law, Behroz faced ample violations of her human rights. Ever since she joined the military she has suffered violence of one type or another, from threats to home invasions. While at work her home was ransacked. More recently threats and anonymous phone calls are more frequent: "They speak in Pashto and then Dari and tell me they know how to find me", she said.

People crowd the tarmac of the Afghan capital's airport on Monday, trying to flee the country as the Taliban took control after President Ashraf Ghani fled the country on the weekend, conceding that the insurgents had won the 20-year war. (AFP/Getty Images)

 

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Thursday, April 22, 2021

Identity Politics of Black Lives Matter

"Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) made a statement — while jurors in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin were not yet sequestered — which demanded street confrontations unless Chauvin were found guilty of murder. The trial judge correctly suggested that any conviction in the case might ultimately be thrown out on appeal, based on what Waters said. He condemned Waters' remarks in the strongest terms, but he did not have the courage to grant a defense motion for a mistrial. Had he done so, that almost certainly would have led to riots — which would have been blamed on the judge, not on Rep. Waters. So he left it to the court of appeals, months in the future, to grant a new trial -- which he should have granted."
Alan M. Dershowitz, Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus, Harvard Law School
Pictured: National Guardsmen and other law enforcement officers stand guard outside the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where former police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of murdering George Floyd, on April 20, 2021. (Photo by Chandan Khanna/AFP via Getty Images)

Two things of a certainty: The former police officer Derek Chauvin of the Minneapolis Police, did, through his deliberate actions, take the life of a former felon, George Floyd, while attempting to arrest him for having passed a counterfeit $20 bill in the purchase of a pack of cigarettes. That Mr.Chauvin caused the death of Mr. Floyd is irrefutable. There are witnesses everywhere to the act, which was captured on video and repeatedly aired to great public dismay and anger. The man was in custody, had been subdued when he resisted arrest, and handcuffed in the prone position, and met his death when his oxygen supply was cut off.
 
Through the evidence of the video, more incriminating than any credible testimony, it was clear that Mr. Chauvin was the instrument of Mr. Floyd's death. There may well have been extenuating circumstances; Mr. Floyd was a drug user and had fentanyl in his system, and his health was compromised by a heart problem. Clearly, however, it was then-Officer Chauvin's knee pressed to Mr. Floyd's neck for over nine minutes of agony for Mr. Floyd who gasped for relief to enable him to breathe, that was the cause of  his death.
"They're a good family and they're calling for peace and tranquility, no matter what that verdict is."
"I'm praying the verdict is the right verdict, which is -- I think it's overwhelming in my view."
"I wouldn't say that unless the jury was sequestered now, [would] not hear me say that."
U.S.President Joe Biden, at the White House
Pool
Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapolis police officer, has been convicted on all charges in the death of George Floyd.   Pool
 
That would, of course, be viewed as the President of the United States interfering with the justice system had the jurors not been sequestered. It was obvious enough that he expressed the opinion that the jury of twelve women and men, black and white, needed to find the defendant guilty as charged. Some, like Professor Dershowitz, feel the state overstepped itself in declaring the death of George Floyd a murder and not a case of manslaughter. Murder is usually premeditated, while Mr. Floyd's death was a miscalculation and a heartless oblivion to his suffering.
 
This was a case fraught with danger for society in general and peace and stability in particular. Black Lives Matter adherents, passionate in their rage over past injustices against the black community in America see their purpose as forcefully reminding the majority white communities in the country of their past and current responsibilities in having enslaved a people, forcing their labour for profit, and over the course of the years manifestly believing in the inferiority of blacks while committing grave human rights crimes against them.
 
The BLM movement has been influential both in the U.S. and abroad for the outrage it invokes that is credible and deserving. But it, like the Minneapolis police officer who committed a black man to death in an age-old manner, has transgressed the boundaries of civil behaviour, committing serious offences of their own in the process. Posturing, threatening, and committing violence against others, both black and white, destroying public and private property, creating chaos in their wake. Defying law and order.
 
Many now view the finding of guilty in the criminal trial of Mr. Chauvin just and deserving. During the course of his professional duties, after all, he committed the cardinal sin of overstating his public duty and in the process of disabling a struggling man, applying continual undue force resulting in his tortured death. Now, Mr. Chauvin is the one in handcuffs and Mr. Floyd's memory as a handcuffed and subdued arrestee has filed the final chapter in the sad and sorry event that transformed a nation into a BLM-revenge-fearing country.
 
Flowers and candles were brought to George Floyd Square as people celebrate after former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty on all counts in the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 20 April 2021.
Chauvin pressed his knee into the back of Mr Floyd's neck for more than nine minutes.  EPA
 
Having pleaded not guilty to the charges of second-degree unintentional murder involving "intentional infliction of bodily harm", third-degree unintentional "depraved mind" murder involving an "act eminently dangerous to others", and second-degree manslaughter involving a death caused by "culpable negligence", former Minneapolis police officer Chauvin has been declared guilty on all counts. And now faces a likely prison sentence of at least ten years, as a first-time criminal offender. Longer, if "aggravating factors" are proven.
 
There were four police officers in total at that scene where George Floyd died. One, at least, was an ethnic minority. The three officers other than Mr. Chauvin were fired by the Minneapolis Police Department when Mr. Chauvin as the perpetrator of Mr. Floyd's death, was fired. All others are due to face trial as the year progresses on charges of aiding-and-abetting in Mr. Floyd's death. None appeared to have made an effort to intervene, to persuade Mr. Chauvin to release Mr. Floyd from the excruciating pain of impending death.  

There is another story here. The story of hardcore animosity between black and white. Guilt on the part of the white community, accusations that cannot be denied from the black community. And a deadly rage that promised to unleash mayhem and even murder along with looting and destruction should Mr. Chauvin not be found guilty. Witnesses who testified for Mr. Chauvin have received threats and a general aura of violent intimidation hung on the air in anticipation of a verdict that could not have been other than it was.

The reasons twofold; that guilt was indeed his, as the evidence clearly demonstrated, though the charges might have been different; and the fear of violence once again erupting on a scale that might dwarf those that were mounted last year in the wake of the death of Mr. Floyd would be repeated. And may yet still be. The BLM movement appears to be addicted to the rage of violence and defiance of the law which nothing seems to appease.
 
Mourners gather for a vigil for George Floyd following the verdict in the Derek Chauvin trial on April 20, 2021 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
People gathered in Minneapolis to celebrate the verdict and pay tribute to George Floyd   Getty Images

 

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Sunday, November 08, 2020

Police Warrant : Report to a Justice Document


"The following is a list of exhibits that were seized from 1215-2020 Jasmine Crescent in the city of Ottawa as a result of a search warrant on the 7th of October 2020."
"33.6 grams of heroin and 86.2 grams of fentanyl were seized. A money counter, a] Voodoo AR-15 Style BB gun, [two Ziploc bags of] buff [weighing about 598 grams (buff defined as a substance added to drugs to dilute potency and increase volume). Clear plastic packaging material, [a] sentry safe, digital scale, [and] rubber bands [were seized]."
"[A] large amount of Canadian currency [also seized and] to be counted by the asset forfeiture unit."
"Accused is now deceased; no charges laid. SIU investigation currently ongoing."
"[All of the seized items were ordered to] be detained in the custody of the Ottawa Police Service until 8 January 2021."
Report to a Justice : Police Document
Black man falls to death after Ottawa police conduct no-knock raid
 
Black Lives Matter sprang into action as they do every time a black man falls afoul of the law and is injured or dies, as they claim that blacks receive harsher, brutal treatment from police, are stopped far more frequently in their vehicles than white men, and are the victims of police homicides while undertaking arrests of blameless blacks going about their business. Society is condemned for the fact that blacks are disproportionately represented in the prison system. That blacks are disproportionate to their presence in society at large, involved in gangs, guns, drugs and smuggling appears irrelevant.
"I was mad. Whatever they were trying to do, it was wrong. There was no justification in the whole situation. There's way too many officers. It's a 12th-floor apartment. There's no due diligence there."
"I knew I had to get this story out. There's most likely countless other stories of this happening that are unreported and way more abuses of power."
"Another black man died today.... If they're truly working for the public, this wouldn't have happened. They treated him like he wasn't a human, but everyone makes mistakes and that's the point of being human."
"You have to learn from your mistakes. He didn't get the chance."
Raymond Aust, 20, Queen's University student, Anthony's brother
Mother says son who fell from balcony 'didn't have time to live'
 
One such case in question was that of a 23-year-old resident of Ottawa who leaped to his death from his bedroom window moments following a police drug raid at his family's Ottawa east-end apartment building, initiated by the Ottawa police tactical unit. Police have been accused of causing the death of Anthony Aust, and his family and the black community are demanding answers, demanding that Ottawa's black police chief undertake an investigation, and hold those involved accountable for the man's death.

The Aust family has hired a lawyer. At the same time, the Special Investigations Unit is undertaking a probe of exactly what had occurred the morning of October 7 when video surveillance footage from within the 12th-flooor apartment showed armed tactical officers breaking down the apartment door, throwing through it into the apartment a flash grenade and making use of a "dynamic entry". All of which tactics have been contested by the family as outrageously unnecessary.

Anthony Aust was, at the time, out on bail, his activities monitored by police and by the courts. He was awaiting trial fir firearm and drug offences, charges that were laid in January following a traffic stop. As part of the bail plan he was wearing a GPS-monitoring ankle bracelet. Video surveillance cameras were installed in the apartment, also part of the bail plan. The criminal charges against the young man were drug possession for the purpose of trafficking, firearm possession and breaking conditions.

All criminal charges which despite that he was out on bail awaiting a hearing, he simply continued to indulge in. That he was doing so, that he was in possession of quantities of hard drugs meant to be trafficked, and devices to enable that trafficking, appears to have evaded the notice of his family. All of which appears to be of no account as well to those accusing the police of causing the man's death by their very presence. A man who chose to evade accountability by momentarily forgetting people cannot fly.

Dynamic entry is a practise used by tactical police squads when they have a founded concern that evidence could be destroyed or that a risk exists to the public and to officers. That all of this took place at all, has resulted in a coalition of black community groups asking police Chief Peter Sloly for a meeting to discuss the raid, where Nhora Aust, Anthony's mother, was informed by police they were looking for a gun and cocaine as they searched her home.

Police have not divulged as public information what was found in the apartment when they searched the home where Anthony Aust flung himself out of a bedroom window of his family's 12th floor apartment. However, when a search warrant is issued police must afterward submit a "report to a justice" under the Criminal Code of Canada, a document that lists an itemized account of what was seized. The justice of the peace who had signed a warrant expects the document to be completed and returned to him within 30 days.
"[Dynamic entries are the] bread and butter [of tactical officers because of how common they are]. We conduct hundreds of them a year in Ontario."
"There are demands from the court system, the judicial system. They like it much better when the accused is in possession of the evidence."
"Narcotics are generally considered disposable evidence, much like child pornography."
Jeff Kilcollins, retired, formerly a duty inspector, Ottawa police force, 20-year SWAT team member


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Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Minneapolis Crime and Punishment

"This year has seen the lowest crime numbers in our Country's recorded history, and now the Radical Left Democrats want to Defund and Abandon our Police."
"Sorry, I want LAW & ORDER!".
U.S. President Donald Trump

"Our commitment is to end policing as we know it and to recreate systems of public safety that actually keep us safe."
"[We need] to listen, especially to our black leaders, to our communities of color, for whom policing is not working and to really let the solutions lie in our community,"
"The idea of having no police department is certainly not in the short term,"
"Yes. We are going to dismantle the Minneapolis Police Department and replace it with a transformative new model of public safety."
Lisa Bender, president, Minneapolis City Council
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 08: People walk down 16th street after Defund The Police was painted on the street near the White House on June 08, 2020 in Washington, DC. After days of protests in DC over the death of George Floyd, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has renamed that section of 16th street "Black Lives Matter Plaza". (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

The death-by-kneehold of George Floyd has galvanized everyone who watched the short and shocking video of a Minneapolis police officer incapacitating the 46-year-old Black resident of the city, suspected of passing a fraudulent American bill at a nearby store where a 911 call to police was made. Counterfeit bills would not have been a stranger to a man who managed to amass a number of serious criminal charges in the past. He had been arrested, was sitting in the police car, and suddenly was outside the car, being held down forcefully, handcuffed and helpless. Resisting arrest. Penalty: death.
 
The shocking video of a man pinned down, begging for air, repeatedly asking to breathe, then dying had the effect of outraging and bringing together all walks of society in condemning the raw brutality on show, guaranteeing that mass protests would result. Even so, no one might have prophesied that the event would spur people all over the United States to march in protest of what was construed as police brutality against yet another Black American, much less that the global community would be inspired to protest, but they did, resoundingly.
 
And then, in stepped the anarchists, the antifas, the Black supremacists, the rude  rabble, gangs and malcontents to take advantage of the popular uproar of disgust and dismay, to turn the protests into
raids on businesses, a threatening presence of rabidly raging thugs given cover for invasions, destruction of private and public property, mass looting, desecration of monuments, thrashings and murder. Amid demands that police everywhere be penalized for massive overreach by some among them.
 
Cities with Black mayors, cities with Black police chiefs, reacted in concert with the protests, but not uniformly; some were aghast at the outcome demanding popularly that organized (and sometimes militarized) police forces be defunded and dismissed, and alternate methods of controlling crime at the municipal level be instituted. The Black criminal class, Black youth who remain a dire threat in society with their gangs, guns, drug trafficking, shoot-ups haven't offered to degang themselves, to surrender their firearms, to refrain from trafficking. 

The mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Frey, remains unimpressed by his Council's call to defund the police in Minneapolis; too much of a realist likely, able to restrain an impulse to radical change for a more thoughtful, workable solution to the enormous problem of some rogue personalities in blue smearing the public faith in police to uphold law and order. Racism certainly does exist. On the other hand, the sheer ubiquity of Black crime focuses attention on its source. And while it's a shock to see Black men pursued and dying at the hands of white men and police, Black society has an obligation to itself to examine the source; rampant crime levels.

So his decision that he would not support defunding his police force and dismissing it in favour of another, unspecified type of social control mechanism, gained Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey rejection by protesters booing him for his refusal to dismiss the city's police force. Leading a spokesman for the mayor to state that he remains "unwavering in his commitment to working with Chief (Medaria) Arradondo toward deep structural reforms and uprooting systemic racism."
 
There's a growing call to defund the police. Here's what it means

"We are going to dismantle the Minneapolis Police Department. And when we're done, we're not simply gonna glue it back together."
"We are going to dramatically rethink how we approach public safety and emergency response."
Jeremiah Ellison, Minneapolis city councilman for Ward 5
Nine members of the 13-member city council voted to dismantle their police department, to replace it with a community-led alternative. Immediate action has been demanded by the thousands of citizens who took to the streets, shouting "defund the police", and so the city council has decided in its wisdom and against better judgement, to do just that, though what a community-led alternative might look like is a matter of speculative theory. Would the police academy train them, would they be volunteers, would they be an organized, salaried group? Wouldn't they end up being yet another police force?

And how high-minded would they remain in their purpose and function once they are fully engaged and face off with the criminal minds who view society as a mass of humanity ripe for criminal exploitation? How long before the sheer weight of the responsibility of their positions and the mind-numbing exposure to ghastly crimes of murder and mayhem overwhelms their moral equilibrium? But the Minneapolis City Council president proclaims their vote as a need to throw in the towel on the policing status quo.

It is not sufficient to winnow out those police officers whose capacity for self-restraint has been corrupted by exposure and experience. The charges levied against the four police officers involved in the death of George Floyd will lead to trials. Two of the men charged are racial minorities. How likely is it that they would be biased against Blacks in their own community? The altercation with a man resisting arrest likely had little to do with  his being Black; reflecting instead his sheer size, physical strength, the drug fentanyl coursing through his bloodstream.

The issue is one of symbolism, a perception based on the reality of human nature where people of different appearance, backgrounds, culture, history, resent and dislike and distrust one another. It is called racism, although there is only one human race, but countless issues between ethnic, religious, ideological, cultural and geographic groups of humanity.

Minneapolis City Council member Alondra Cano speaks during a meeting at Powderhorn Park in Minneapolis on Sunday. The focus of the meeting was the defunding of the Minneapolis Police Department. (Jerry Holt/Star Tribune via AP)

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Sunday, May 31, 2020

Riots, Looting and Sacking

"It is time to rebuild."
"Rebuild the city, rebuild our justice system and rebuild the relationship between law enforcement and those they're charged to protect."
Tim Walz, state governor, Minnesota

"We cannot continue to allow this destruction to continue. It is very much complete chaos, or it was."
"It's very much a spiralling situation."
"It's disrupting innocent people's lives. It's putting innocent people in harm's way."
Andrea Jenkins, Minneapolis City Council

"This shouldn't be 'normal' in 2020 America. It will fall mainly on the officials of Minnesota to ensure that the circumstances surrounding George Floyd's death are investigated thoroughly and that justice is ultimately done."
"But it falls on all of us to work together to crate a 'new normal' in which the legacy of bigotry and unequal treatment no longer infects our institutions or our hearts."
Former President Barack Obama
Video shows Minneapolis officer kneeling on black man's neck
Video shows Minneapolis officer kneeling on black man's neck
Four days of mass protests that have turned into violent conflagrations, looting, and total disorder in Minneapolis have spread to Chicago, New York, Denver, Los Angeles and Oakland. Authorities have been pleading for public order, for orderly demonstrations in respect of the law, and people have responded by enlarging the protests, complete with higher rates of violence, leaving a number of police stations virtually destroyed and burnt out, along with neighbourhood shops, local businesses looted, glass fronts smashed.

Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, since discharged, has now been charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter for his having deliberately held down George Floyd, a 42-year-old black man under arrest, pressing his knee on the prostrate Floyd's neck, asphyxiating him, even as the victim pleaded for air, repeatedly groaning and stating "Please, I can't breathe". Three other officers present at the scene were also fired --Thomas Lane, Tou Thao and J.Alexander Kueng and may face charges as well.

"That's less than four days. That's extraordinary. We have never charged a case in that time frame", stated the Minnesota Public Safety Commissioner. And if authorities hoped that by speedily firing the four officers, and charging the major perpetrator of the murder of the black man it would serve to soften the fury of the Minneapolis protesters, they were mistaken. As another fire was set at a police station in close proximity to the crime scene, protesters cheered.

Nearby St.Paul saw dozens of fires set there as well, with close to 200 businesses damaged and looted. Many business owners had placed handmade signs in their windows with messages such as "This is a black-owned business", and "This is a community-owned business", to little avail. Thugs among other protesters were on a rampage of rage and would not be appeased; appeals to civic spirit and respect for the rule of law abased by what the law had just done.

While the mob caroused and destroyed and looted, nothing was done to apprehend them. Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis defended the city's response, which was effectively to do nothing to further inflame the rioters, with the explanation that the situation had become too dangerous for police to be seen doing their legitimate duty. Louisville, Kentucky saw gunfire breaking out. Minneapolis saw black smoke rising above its skyline, where the state governor finally deployed some 500 soldiers to restore the peace.

Soldiers blockaded the streets surrounding the most heavily damaged areas of the city, armed with assault-style rifles. Firefighters worked putting out blazes. Tuesday's  airing of a bystander's video of the unfolding event, with George Floyd's appeal to the police officer whose knee was jammed into the man's neck, sent the city into paroxysms of rage. According to Andrea Jenkins, both men knew one another prior to Mr. Floyd's arrest. They had both worked as security staff at the same nightclub. 

Non-violent protests also took place in Minneapolis by hundreds of people genuinely outraged on George Floyd's behalf in the belief, through long experience, that what happened to Mr. Floyd was distinctly connected to his race, that this means of controlling an arrested suspect would be unlikely to take place had the man arrested been white. Whatever an investigation will ultimately reveal about the relationship between the two men it will not go far in explaining why yet another black man in America met an untimely end.

George Floyd #5, (left) with other teammates and his coach, George Walker (far right)
George Floyd #5, (left) with other teammates and his coach, George Walker (far right)

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Saturday, December 28, 2019

Chile: Mass Protests -- Massive Human Rights Violations

"We never thought we would have to come back to Chile under these circumstances to record massive human rights violations."
"We thought this was history."
Jose Miguel Vivanco, Human Rights Watch

"Carabineros is a militarized police force, with a military structure and logic, not a civil police force."
"All attempts to reform it after dictatorship have been very slow, with very little capacity for civilian control."
Claudio Fuentes, professor, Diego Portales University

"The march was very peaceful, but when we approached a mall some soldiers appeared.  Some protesters began to insult them and they suddenly knelt and aimed their guns at us."
"After the first shots rang out people started throwing stones. More gunfire followed – and that’s when Romario was hit. We must have been more than 100 metres away, so we couldn’t have hurt or threatened them."
Ulises Cortés, 19-year-old student, Coquimbo, Chile

Two months ago the Chilean protests were inaugurated when a proposed subway fare increase brought people to the streets and then inequality was identified as a greater issue in the peaceful gatherings which swiftly turned to violence in confrontations with police whose abuse of the protesters was starkly reminiscent of Chile's years under dictatorship. Chile's National Institute for Human Rights, an agency of the state, categorized thousands of instances of abuse.

The National Institute for Human Rights looked at 400 of the incidents they documented as torture and cruel treatment, while another 194 involved sexual violence, along with four rapes. Excessive use of force by police was charged in over 800 incidents, among them at least six killings by security forces. Chile's national police force, the Carabineros, has reacted to the street unrest precisely as they did under the rule of General Augusto Pinochet, when it finally ended back in 1990.

Carabineros fire tear gas on protesters during demonstrations at Plaza Baquedano, in Santiago, Chile, 15 November 2019.
Police accused of aiming at peoples' eyes    EPA

At that time, the kind of human rights violations notched up by the Carabineros resulted in the deaths and disappearances of over three thousand Chileans, with some 38,000 people having undergone systemic torture while in incarceration. General Mario Rozas, who heads the Carabineros spoke of 856 internal investigations in response to the reports, and announced institutional changes to the Carabineros' organization.

Chile's President Sebastian Pinera has opened welcoming arms to four human rights organizations; the Organization of American States and the United Nations among them, claiming that all accusations will be investigated. A task force led by the interior minister is prepared to propose reforms. The use of pellets has been suspended by police, but as the human rights groups point out, the Carabineros continue to fire tear gas cartridges at demonstrators.

Eye injuries suffered at the hands of police have left hundreds of demonstrators maimed, caused by the indiscriminate use of riot guns. Two protesters were blinded. Altogether, over 12,700 people were wounded across Chile since mid-October. In the past two years, 35 generals in the Carabineros were involved in a series of scandals, and ousted, including the former police chief who stepped down last year after an anti-terrorist squad killed an indigenous man, then covered it up.

An injured protester walks during a protest against Chile's government in Santiago, Chile, November 15, 2019.
More than 200 protesters have sustained eye injuries   Reuters

One of the largest, most far-reaching embezzlement scandals in the history of the country involved senior officers of the Carabineros, involving some $35-million, which led to the conviction of close to 100 police officers and civilians. For the past ten years, large protests demanded education and pension reform, an end to corruption, and respect for the land rights of indigenous people.



Aerial view as demonstrators march during a national strike and general demonstration called by different workers unions on November 12, 2019 in Santiago, Chile
Huge rallies and demonstrations have ramped up the pressure on the government    Getty Images

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Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Lacking Judgement, Sacrificing Lives

"Just about everything that could go wrong did go wrong. [The incident] was really, really bad."
"[Stopping them by any means -- even with bullets -- was] absolutely the right thing to do."
"In a situation like this, the police are reactve. This is not a situation they want to be in. Their hand was forced."
David Klinger, criminal justice professor, University of Missouri, St.Louis

"We don't always have to be the warrior. Sometimes we have to understand that retreating is OK. You don't always have to get the bad guy."
"[The video was] one of the most tragic [she has seen]. Yes, the suspects are responsible, absolutely, but we are also responsible for every single round that went toward innocent bystanders."
"Each one of them had the potential to kill someone."
Heather Taylor, homicide sergeant, president, Ethical Society of Police, St.Louis
Shootout in Florida leaves four dead

This was a violent episode that happened to be recorded on live television where dozens of police officers with drawn weapons swarmed a UPS truck that had been hijacked. The truck was stuck, crowded in the centre of rush-hour traffic at a busy intersection in south Florida. Two men suspected of armed robbery were in the truck, along with the truck driver whom they had taken hostage. All the while police officers continued to take shots at the truck, bystanders were trapped helplessly in their cars, alongside the truck.

At its conclusion four people were left dead, the two hijackers, the UPS driver, 27 years of age, and a 70-year-old man idling at the light at the intersection, while waiting for it change so he could proceed to make his way home after work. U.S. national news circulated video of the event, and viewers and social media alike questioned the manner in which the event unfolded in the midst of a crowd of homebound traffic at rush hour, with police feeling it perfectly suitable to shoot at suspects, endangering innocent civilians.

ups-truck-shootout-florida-wsvn-via-nns.png
Police surround a UPS truck in South Florida December 5, 2019. WSVN-TV via NNS

The family of the young UPS driver minced no words, that it was the height of irresponsibility, a total lack of professionalism for the police involved to exchange fire in such a crowded environment, packed with vulnerable people where the potential for inadvertent death and injury was palpable. The police do have their defenders who feel they had little option but to react as they did, confronting a deadly threat. Would the two criminals have murdered the UPS driver, or allowed him to go, unscathed? No one can ever know.

UPS driver Frank Ordonez  killed  Thursday, Dec. 5, 2019
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Unknown is who it was that fired the shots that killed Frank Ordonez, the UPS driver and the elderly man Richard Cutshaw,  whose vehicle was idling at the light. Where the bullets were fired from, and how many went flying around the scene. According to Professor Klinger, given the chaotic episode and its calamitous conclusion it represented "a perfect example" why police are permitted to use deadly force against dangerous criminals, given that Lamar Alexander and Ronnie Jerome Hill had a trail of violence left behind them that fateful evening.

It was originally a high-speed chase through two counties that interrupted residents' rush hour commute home. A Miami-area jewellery store was the focus of the two men's actions, which triggered a silent alarm, and where a female store employee had been injured while the two would-be robbers and the store owner exchanged fire. The gunmen sped north in a truck, commandeering the UPS truck as the driver was making deliveries. That's when a number of police cars sped after the UPS truck, the driver trapped inside.

Officers surrounded the truck when it became boxed in by traffic. The interpretation that homicide sergeant Heather Taylor arrived at, as she viewed the video footage was of police refusing to retreat, preferring to place innocent civilians in jeopardy because of their ill-thought-out decision. Officers could have engaged the robbers when a clearer opportunity presented itself as far as she was concerned, instead of opening fire in the crowded intersection.

An FBI official at the scene of a shooting, Thursday in Miramar, Fla. Four people, including a UPS driver, were killed in the shootout between the armed robbers and police authorities.
Brynn Anderson/AP

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Monday, November 18, 2019

Hong Kong in Extremis 

"If they [protesters] continue such dangerous actions, we would have no choice but to use minimum force, including live rounds."
Louis Lau, Hong Kong police spokesman

"The protesters have been reacting to the police."
"We haven't fought back as much as we could. I would be prepared for jail. We are fighting for Hong Kong."
Joris (last name withhold) 23, civil engineer

"Hong Kong's Chief Executive has the responsibility to do everything possible to prevent a massacre. She must order the police to exercise restraint and not to use live ammunition or other forms of lethal force."
"A bloodbath on a Hong Kong campus would be devastating for Hong Kong as a whole."
Malcolm Rifkind, former British foreign secretary
A protester arrested while trying to leave the campus
A protester arrested while trying to leave the campus  Reuters

The demonstrations have been ongoing for five months. While Beijing denies it has been interfering in the civil operations of Hong Kong, blaming foreign influences for inciting the people of Hong Kong to engage in violent riots against the police, demonstrators attest to the fact that it is the hand of the Chinese Communist Party exercising its options from Beijing under the direction of President Xi Jinping to wrest total control into the mainland orbit that has caused them to react to protect the island state's semi-autonomy.

Over the weeks of protests vociferous claims and counter-claims, actions and reactions have escalated with violence on both sides turning Hong Kong into a totally disrupted metropolis in virulent discontent with the status quo. Beijing's move to impose greater authority precipitated the unrest and its obvious agenda has strengthened the resolve of protesters. Adult children whose parents are in support of the status quo, including Beijing's transparent entitlement aspirations join the protests in defiance of authority while not disclosing their involvement.

Trapped inside Hong Kong's Polytechnic University with police water cannons and armoured vehicles laying siege on the periphery, raging battles have continued day and night with students determined to escape arrest and incarceration and to carry on with their chosen path of defiance. Students have responded to police tactics by making petrol bombs and hurling bricks with improvised catapults. Someone shot an arrow through a policeman's leg.

Normalcy is elusive; neither the police nor the demonstrators are willing to cede to the other; not to restore calm and reassurance to the business community and international investors, nor to placate the wild emotions of defiant rage against authorities imposing their stealth agenda on the city and its millions of residents. There are injuries aplenty among the protesters.

Some people on the front lines have been injured; scalding chemical burns from the water cannon jets have injured others; the chemicals no doubt related to the colours in the water jets, to enable police to identify those involved in the protests; if they're on the front lines, they must be protest leaders and therefore arrests are mandatory to interrupt the leaders' influence.

Frantic to escape the university siege, activists trapped at the Polytechnic were anxious for release. "If we can only hold on till dawn, more [protesters] might come", one exhausted protester said with faint hope. Among the protesters there were some busy, building fires inside campus buildings. China's financial hub in wild disarray, with major highways blocked off, the tunnel link between the Kowloon peninsula and Hong Kong disrupted, has created chaotic confusion.

Three of the protesters have so far been shot. Universities abroad have recalled their students, enabling their transfer out of Hong Kong, to return to their places of origin, in the U.K. and Canada, leaving the exchange programs in Hong Kong behind. "We've been trapped here, that's why we need to fight until the end. If we don't fight, Hong Kong will be over", 19-year-old Ah Lung declared.

Masks of any kind were outlawed by the administration weeks ago, but that hasn't stopped the wearing of gas masks or the use of handkerchiefs to tie over mouths and noses as protection from the miasma of tear gas floating about. Protesters on the university roof fired arrows and threw flaming projectiles with their catapults toward police lines.

Petrol bombs played havoc on Sunday when violence was at a high-water mark setting fire to armoured police vehicles.

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More than 200 devastated parents are sitting outside #PolyU and hoping to see their kids. Several hundred students are still locked in PolyU and these parent are helpless. They can only wait. Nathan Law, Hong Kong

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Saturday, October 05, 2019

Beware, Pay Attention, Vehicular Homicide in View

"Once you have heard the evidence, it is the Crown's position that you will be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that Abdulahi Sharif wanted to kill people."
"He tried first to murder Constable Chernyk, and then during an extremely dangerous driving pattern, he fled from police causing bodily harm to four strangers."
"It is the Crown's position he intentionally tried to kill these people by hitting them in that U-Haul truck."
Crown prosecutor Elizabeth Wheaton, Edmonton

"I thought the vehicle was going to hit me, so I turned to my left to get out of the way. I thought I gave myself enough time to move out of the way of the vehicle, but that didn't happen."
"The next thing I remember I was flying through the air and tucking my chin to my chest."
"I could feel the top of my head burning and my hairline was very wet."
"It was at that moment that I realized there was a black male on top of me, stabbing me with a knife."
"Officer down."
Const.Mike Chernyk, Edmonton police officer
Abdulahi Hasan Sharif
At the trial of 32-year-old Abdulahi Hasan Sharif, facing 11 charges going back to a vehicular attack in Edmonton in 2017, Edmonton police officer Const.Mike Chernyk said what was going through his mind at the time was "Trying to survive for my kids. I'm a single parent with two children". The charges against Sharif include five counts of attempted murder, and he has pleaded not guilty to all the charges. Among the charges are those of aggravated assault and dangerous driving.

Const.Chernyk was alone on duty, directing traffic when he noticed a car fast approaching, an engine revving. Unable to prevent the collision, a vehicle against his vulnerable body that sent him flying, he shortly became aware that someone was on top of him. The burning he felt and the wet along his hairline was, though he failed to realize it at the time while in shock, was that he had been stabbed and blood was running down his face. He became aware that the man was attempting to grab his service pistol, and he managed to push it further into its holster.

Const.Chernyk suffered cuts to the top of his head, in his inner left ear, and between his left ear and eye, with scrapes and bruises on his arms, leg and abdomen. His first instinct was to chase the man who, unable to take possession of his pistol, had began to leave the scene, then understood that should he lose consciousness no one might find him to give him aid, so he called in "officer down" and waited by his police vehicle for other officers to arrive.
"Suddenly, he noticed headlights coming toward him. He heard the sound of a vehicle accelerating. He tried to move out of the way but it was too late."
"A number of bystanders tried to come to his aid as he laid [sic] on his back and tried to get his bearings." 
"But suddenly the driver of that vehicle was there. A black man in dark clothing with a knife and he was trying to stab Const.Chernyki in the head with that knife."
"The bystanders saw the knife and they fled, fearing for their lives. Const.Chernyk was now alone, fighting for his."
Crown prosecutor Elizabeth Wheaton
At day one of the trial, Det.Allen Park and Sgt.Bradley Redl of the city police crime scene investigations unit were the first two witnesses. They had taken photographs of the scenes, of seized items, and of the injuries sustained by Const.Chernyk, as well as those that Sharif had sustained. The Somali national who spoke through an interpreter had been injured in the crash before his arrest, had a few taser "darts" stuck to his body and clothing.
Edmonton Police Service Const. Mike Chernyk in hospital
Abdulahi Sharif's intention had been to kill people in downtown Edmonton. The lead officer on the case is a national security investigator with the RCMP. On the occasion of Sharif's attempts at murder, it all began during the observation of a military appreciation night held at a CFL football game at Commonwealth Stadium. It was recounted for the jury of 13 people that Const.Chernyk kept his hand on his gun to keep it from falling into his assailant's hands. Eventually the struggle stopped and the attacker fled.

Officers at a containment point stopped a man a few hours later, driving a U-Haul, and when an officer took the driver's licence, he sped off in the vehicle, taking police on a high-speed chase through the city's downtown area. Speeds of up to 85 km/h were reached by police following the fugitive. His speeding truck turned into an alley, striking two pedestrians, then another two near a book shop, before a police vehicle knocked the van onto its side, pulling out the suspect.
"The Crown's position is none of the collisions were accidents. Mr. Sharif could have avoided people in that alley but he didn't. He intentionally hit them."
"He could have stayed on the road by Audreys Books but he intentionally drove into a crowd of people."
"[Police] ended this dangerous incident without any loss of life [when a police truck driver knocked the U-Haul over and a suspect was pulled from the front of the van following the deployment of a flash-bang and police smashed its windshield]."
Crown prosecutor Elizabeth Wheaton
A U-Haul box truck was tipped over after a police chase west down Jasper Avenue on Saturday, Sept. 30, 2017. Ian Kucerak / Edmonton Journal   

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