Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety

Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety, News

Prison staff may be tied to threats – Overtime scheme could be a motive

Prison staff may be tied to threats Overtime scheme could be a motive By Maria Cramer and David Abel Globe Staff / May 11, 2011 State Police and Hampden County authorities are investigating whether state prison employees made anonymous phone calls, threatening to kill an escaped inmate being held at a Springfield hospital, possibly as part of a scheme to generate more overtime opportunities, officials said yesterday. A spokesman for the Department of Correction confirmed that two staff members have been suspended as authorities investigate whether the two made the calls to murder suspect Tamik Kirkland while he was in Baystate Medical Center. Several law enforcement officials said authorities are examining whether the Correction Department employees allegedly made the phone calls so officials would order more overtime shifts to guard a prisoner whose life was in danger. FULL STORY HERE http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/05/11/prison_staff_focus_of_investigation_into_threats_against_escaped_inmate/?p1=News_links

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FBI retirees fight to free John Connolly

FBI retirees fight to free John Connolly By Richard A. Serrano / Tribune Washington Bureau  |   Tuesday, May 10, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by AP (File) WASHINGTON — One hundred retired FBI agents, many long past their crime-fighting days, are rallying this spring in an effort to exonerate a disgraced former agent from Boston who ran one of the bureau’s most controversial informant operations. They call themselves the Former FBI Agents for Justice for John. Among them are two retired FBI deputy directors and another who became associate attorney general in Washington. Twice-convicted Agent John J. Connolly Jr. discredited the FBI. A son of South Boston, he turned the leaders of the Irish criminal underworld into government informants on their Italian-American counterparts, and then was convicted of tipping them off to imminent arrest as well as taking payoffs from them even as they continued to kill people. Next month, he will leave federal prison after nine years in custody. But he goes straight to Florida to begin a 40-year sentence for precipitating a gangland slaying in Miami. Richard Baker, a leader of the retirees, believes his former colleague is innocent and points out that for a 70-year-old man, 40 years is a “death sentence.” “I have no problem doing this,” Baker said, defending the agents’ support of a man who dishonored the FBI they spent their lifetimes building up. “John was wrongly convicted. And he’ll be dead after just two years in that Florida system. He’ll be shanked or killed once they figure out he was an FBI agent.” Connolly has always maintained that his superiors at the bureau told him to protect gangsters James “Whitey” Bulger and Stephen “the Rifleman” Flemmi of the infamous Winter Hill gang despite their crime rampage because they were useful informants against their rivals in the Italian-American mob in New England. Bulger vanished in 1995 and remains on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted List. But Justice Department officials, state prosecutors and relatives of victims have a starkly different view. “John Connolly wore a badge,” said Michael Von Zamft, who prosecuted Connolly in Florida. “He was an FBI agent, and he swore to uphold the law. And yet he became one of the criminals and, maybe worse, he was hiding behind that badge.” Von Zamft also was critical of the former agents’ support for Connolly. “I don’t know why 100 agents are rallying around him. The man’s been convicted by two juries. Not one, but two,” he said. The former agents, including former FBI deputy directors Weldon L. Kennedy and Bruce J. Gebhardt, have made no headway with Washington in trying to get the federal conviction overturned. They have now turned their focus to Florida, where Connolly is being transferred June 28. Connolly was charged with first-degree murder in the killing of World Jai Alai President John Callahan in 1982. Connolly had warned Bulger and Flemmi that Callahan was likely to implicate them in a previous murder. John Martorano, working for Bulger and Flemmi, killed Callahan and stuffed his body in the trunk of a Cadillac and left it at Miami International Airport. Connolly’s supporters have made an issue of the disparity in the prison terms for Connolly and the hit man, Martorano, who confessed to killing 20 people and served 12 years. Today, Martorano hangs out in Boston’s Back Bay, and in the mornings at a bar called Daisy Buchanan’s. “I’m not biased either way,” the killer said about the disparity in sentences. “Whatever happens, happens.” In March, a three-member panel of state appellate judges ruled against Connolly without issuing a written opinion, and Connolly is now appealing to the Florida Supreme Court. “We need to get a good opinion out of that Florida appeals court,” said Willie Reagan, who served as an undercover agent infiltrating the mob in New England. “If they refuse, we’re essentially dead in the water.” From his cell in Butner, N.C., Connolly wrote a series of emails to the Los Angeles Times. “It’s the worst cover-up in the modern annals of the Justice Department,” he wrote. Connolly, who was the basis for the role played by the actor Matt Damon in “The Departed,” the Oscar-winning film about law enforcement corruption loosely based on Connolly’s story, said he had been “deliberately framed” by perjured testimony from mobsters he was investigating and FBI superiors who were on the take. As for the slaying in Florida three decades ago, Connolly dismissed it as a “time-lapsed murder I had nothing to do with.” Frank Keating, an FBI agent who rose to associate attorney general and governor of Oklahoma, is bothered that Connolly remains in prison while Martorano walks free after killing 20 people, including a friend of Keating’s wife’s parents. “John Connolly scraped his knees and there’s no excuse for his behavior,” Keating said. “But a killer of other human beings walking around in order to get a dirty FBI agent? That’s just mind-boggling. Do you catch a minnow with a shark? I’d rather go after the shark.” ___ Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1336902

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Judges rips gun access at sentencing of ‘career criminal’

Judges rips gun access at sentencing of ‘career criminal’ By Laura Crimaldi  |   Wednesday, April 27, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage A Hub judge disgusted by easy access to guns on city streets sentenced a Dorchester “career criminal” to 14 to 15 years behind bars today for paralyzing a 19-year-old who was trying to shield his younger brother from gunfire. Suffolk Superior Court Judge Thomas Connolly said the confrontation that left Joao Perreira without the full use of his legs would have only been a quickly forgotten fist fight if the suspect did not have an illegal .357 magnum. “This was a very, very serious crime that I’m sure nobody thought was going to happen that night,” Connolly said before sentencing Daunte Beal, 23. “Once again the availability of guns. Guns, guns. guns. If the guns were not available this would have never have happened. … The availability of guns is the biggest problem in this city.” Perreira and his brother, Ovidido, then 15, were at a birthday party on July 13, 2008, when the shooting took place, prosecutors said. Beal shot at Perreira and his brother after a confrontation with a group of people who threw bottles at Beal’s car. One bottle shattered a car window and struck Beal in the head, drawing blood, prosecutors said. That incident was preceded by a verbal argument earlier in the evening that was settled amicably, prosecutors said. Authorities said Beal drove to the Howard Avenue party after that confrontation and threatened to slap anyone who had a problem. After being struck, Beal got out of his car carrying a .357 magnum revolver, prosecutors said. The Perreira brothers and another man ran to the back of a nearby building as Beal tailed them, firing twice. The brothers ran to a porch and tried to open a locked door to escape. Prosecutors said Beal fired three more times at the brothers from 6 to 8 feet away. A bullet struck Jaoa Perreira in the lower back, leaving him in a wheelchair most of the time, prosecutors said. The brothers did not attend the sentencing. Suffolk County Assistant District Attorney Joseph Janezic asked for a harsher sentence that would have put Beal away for 29 to 30 years. Under career criminal laws, Beal had to serve a minimum of 10 years because of his prior convictions for assault and battery, cocaine possession and assault and battery on a public employee, Janezic said. Beal, dressed in a sweater, dress shirt, neck tie and eye glasses, waved to his parents and siblings as he was led away in handcuffs and leg shackles. His father, Leon Beal, said his son is innocent and appealing the jury’s decision. “I don’t see how he was found guilty,” he said. “I have sympathy for (Perreira) but my concern is for my child.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1333704

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Blackstonian on Greater Boston WGBH. Apr. 25, 2011: A controversial flier on police brutality

Blackstonian on Greater Boston WGBH. Apr. 25, 2011: A controversial flier on police brutality Was it research, or an excuse to gang up on police? The Boston Herald’s Michele McPhee and Jamarhl Crawford of the Boston Black Men’s Leadership Group join Emily to talk about a controversial flier distributed at Suffolk University.

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Police call Suffolk student project ‘cop-hate baiting’

Police call Suffolk student project ‘cop-hate baiting’ ‘REGRETTABLE’: This flier for a Suffolk student project drew the ire of Boston police. By Michele McPhee  |   Monday, April 25, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Boston Police brass and union officials are furious at a Suffolk University Law School student project that the patrolmen’s union is calling “cop-hate baiting at its worst,’’ while the university has moved to distance itself from the initiative. Fliers for the “Police Misconduct Documentation Project” and the “Police Complaint Assistance Project” were posted at the university’s campus, asking: “Have you been abused, brutalized or mistreated by the Boston Police … ?” Late last week, after an inquiry by the Herald, Suffolk University ordered the fliers taken down, saying the collaboration between Suffolk Law students, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Boston Black Men’s Leadership Group should not have used the law school’s logo. Suffolk University spokesman Greg Gatlin said, “The university does not take a position on public policy issues that are addressed in the many academic programs throughout the institution.’’ Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association President Tom Nee said, “We don’t have a problem with righteous complaints, and the department has several transparent ways to file a complaint. But this project is cop-hate baiting at its worst and the language on the flier is offensive. This is essentially ‘how to sue the BPD.’ ” BPD Commissioner Ed Davis called the project a disservice to both police and students. “The department thoroughly investigates legitimate criticisms and encourages community feedback. We enjoy a strong collaboration with local colleges and universities, therefore a school project intimating a widespread presence of misconduct does a disservice to both the student population and the officers,’’ Davis said. Suffolk University professor Karen Blum of the Rappaport Law Center — whose pro bono program pairs students with the ACLU to file police-abuse complaints — said the language on the fliers is “regrettable” and had them removed. “The Police Complaint Assistance Project is not a seminar in how to sue police officers, nor is it meant to be an indictment of the Boston Police Department,’’ Blum said. “The school has removed the fliers because we certainly would not endorse the word brutalized.” Blum said the project pairs students with people who have police-abuse complaints solely for the purpose of navigating the police department’s Internal Affairs Bureau, not to encourage civil suits against the city. ACLU lawyer Sarah Wunsch said police are sometimes unresponsive to complaints and that people are sometimes afraid to come forward, problems the project is designed to address. Jamal Crawford of the Boston Black Men’s Leadership Group said, “We know that there is harassment and intimidation going on. But what gets to Internal Affairs is a very small percentage of what’s happening. There are some great cops out there but there are some … officers who break the law and blur the line of civil rights.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1333026

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Location, location, location for police

Location, location, location for police By Natalie Sherman  |   Saturday, April 23, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage New tracking technology is making police work more efficient, even as it creates gray areas in the legal code, experts say. “This is the wild, wild west,” said Tom Nolan, an associate professor of criminal justice at Boston University and a 27-year veteran of the Boston Police Department. “Legislative bodies and courts are years away from being able to establish any body of law to deal with this.” Nolan and other experts expressed concern amid a furor over research revealing that what Nolan refers to as “too-smart phones” — such as the Apple iPhone and the Motorola Droid — store user location data. Such data has long been a boon to cops, who routinely petition cell phone companies for access to customer information.   In Burlington, mapping technology allowed police to predict the next time and location in a string of home burglaries with almost 70 percent accuracy, said Glen A. Mills, president of the Massachusetts Association of Crime Analysts. “In the past, we would have flooded the area for weeks at a time, and it would have cost massive amounts of money,” Mills, a lieutenant in the Burlington Police Department, said. “Now we can make predictions on the dates and time when crime is more likely to happen.” But civil liberties experts warned of a dark side. “Our phone carries so much data about us — where you go, what you do, who you know,” Massachusetts ACLU privacy rights coordinator Kady Crockman said. “The exposure of this really private information could lead to all sorts of privacy nightmares.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1332709

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Ex-gangbanger helps rid Dorchester of his shooter

Ex-gangbanger helps rid Dorchester of his shooter VALIANT: Tramane Smith struggles to maintain his emotions inside Suffolk Superior Court yesterday prior to the sentencing of Donald Williams, inset. Photo by Patrick Whittemore By Peter Gelzinis  |   Saturday, April 23, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Columnists The good people of Dorchester will not have to worry about Donald Ray Williams haunting the Greenwood Street area for the next 35 or 40 years. Should he survive prison to return one day, the gang leader called “Mann” will be nudging 70. By then, maybe he will have outgrown the desire to shoot people in the back, the way he did to Tramane Smith. “I know there is no honor among thieves,” Smith wrote in his victim impact statement, “but what you did to me was beyond that. I loved you like a brother.” The 24-year-old Smith declined to read those words aloud yesterday. He opted to remain in the back of a Suffolk courtroom, confined to the wheelchair that Mann, once his best friend, put him in. Though Tramane was two years younger and a bit shorter than the skinny friend who ruled over the Greenwood Street Packers, he functioned as Mann’s true muscle. “(Tramane) was a tough kid who could handle himself,” one cop noted yesterday. “Williams couldn’t fight his way out of a paper bag. But he’d shoot you in a second.” “Everywhere I was,” Smith said, during two full days on the witness stand, “he (Mann) was.” On the night of Nov. 24, 2007, Tramane Smith told Mann he was leaving the gang. To prove it, he returned the .40-caliber pistol his friend had given him. For a couple of hours, Tramane thought he’d actually made it out, until the moment he heard a shot and couldn’t feel his legs. Mann fired two more bullets into his friend’s back, then moved in closer. Just before shooting him in the face, Mann sneered over the friend he thought was about to die, “(expletive, expletive) … that’s what you get.” All of 20 at the time, Tramane Smith managed to grab his cell phone and call his girlfriend to say he was dying. He then instructed her to get a message to his brother: “Tell my brother that Mann shot me.” It’s not every day that Suffolk DA Dan Conley and Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis sit side-by-side at a sentencing hearing. But then, it’s not every day a paralyzed ex-gangbanger helps rid the city of a one-man crime wave. Conley called it a “watershed moment,” one that could help change the landscape of intimidation that has held places like Greenwood Street hostage. Davis suggested that perhaps Tramane Smith’s resolve went beyond his paralysis. Before he was gunned down and left for dead, his cousin, Charles Bunch, was killed. Two weeks earlier, Bunch had stepped out of a car Smith was sitting in, walked a block to randomly gun down the first person he saw on rival turf — and wound up shooting innocent 13-year-old Steven Odom. Tramane Smith told this jury that he was disgusted with his cousin’s act, calling him a “kid killer” to his face. “I wouldn’t be surprised,” Davis sighed, “if that was one of the prime reasons this kid wanted out of the gang life. He’d had enough.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1332716

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Some Brockton police officers object to fundraiser in memory of Danroy ‘DJ’ Henry of Easton Brockton officer warned after using work email to complain about Taunton event

Some Brockton police officers object to fundraiser in memory of Danroy ‘DJ’ Henry of Easton Brockton officer warned after using work email to complain about Taunton event Wayne Dozier of Boston, left, grandfather of college football player Danroy “DJ” Henry Jr., who was shot and killed by a police officer, wipes his eyes as Jamele Dozier, Danroy’s uncle, holds a photo of the football player during a news conference in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood on Thursday. By Vicki-Ann Downing Enterprise Staff Writer Posted Apr 22, 2011 @ 06:00 AM BROCKTON — A  Brockton police officer used his work email to send a message to a restaurant holding a benefit to honor the late Danroy “DJ” Henry of Easton, asking when a similar event would be held for the police officers involved in Henry’s fatal shooting in New York. “Please let me know when the benefit is being held for the two police officers that were struck and killed by the drunk driver,” wrote Patrolman Scott D. Uhlman. “I will charter a bus and fill it up with people who would spend money at Uno’s for a good cause.” The three-day fundraiser, held in February at Uno Chicago Grill in Taunton, raised $5,000 for the DJ Dream Fund, a nonprofit group founded by the Henry family that will award money to children younger than 18 for the purchase of sports equipment and to pay athletic fees and gym memberships. Henry, 20, a student at Pace University, was shot and killed by police on Oct. 17 in a shopping plaza in suburban New York. His family on Wednesday filed a wrongful-death civil suit against one police officer and the village that employed him. That officer, Aaron Hess, was named “Officer of the Year” last week by his union. Police contend DJ Henry was drunk and drove his car at Hess, who landed on the hood and shot through the windshield. Uhlman’s email, which incorrectly said that police were “killed” in the Henry incident, was one of many received from law enforcement personnel after the fundraiser for the “DJ Dream Fund” was reported on The Enterprise website, the Henry family said. Another Brockton police officer, Jason Ford, a decorated Iraq War veteran, wrote Uno’s from his home email account, not his work account. “As a longtime and faithful patron of your restaurant, I would like to know when the benefit for the two New York police officers DJ Henry ran down while underage, intoxicated, refusing to obey the lawful orders and attempting to flee” will be, Ford wrote. “I would love to attend the benefit for those officers.” The emails from police to Uno’s led Henry’s father, Dan Henry of Easton, to write a letter of complaint to Brockton Mayor Linda M. Balzotti. “My family and I recently learned of the concerns expressed by several of your officers in advance of a Dream Fund fundraiser held at the Uno’s in Taunton,” Henry wrote. “Why they would object to a fund that will enable youth throughout Massachusetts to afford sports equipment, pay participation fees and afford gym memberships is troubling to us. “As we intend to both fund-raise and distribute funds to those in need living in Brockton, we hope that you can assure us that this was an isolated incident and that the Dream Fund will be welcomed in Brockton.” Balzotti did not respond to Henry’s letter. The mayor’s office said this week that Balzotti considered the letter “informational” and the issue to be a “personnel matter” that she brought to the attention of the Police Chief William Conlon. Conlon said he issued a warning about the matter, but did not discipline anyone. “People were told that whatever their opinions may be, they can’t use emails from here to express them,” Conlon said. “They were warned about the future use of computers in that fashion.” Conlon called the Henry case “a very unfortunate situation that inflamed a lot of passions on both sides, and I think it’s best if we stay out of it. It’s a tragic story and very sad for the family.” After the emails were received by Uno’s in Taunton, the corporate office in Boston asked the event organizers to write a letter to Uno’s chief operating officer, Roger L. Zingle, explaining that the money raised would be used to benefit children, not for the Henry family or its legal expenses. The goal was to “be sure there was no misunderstanding,” said Rick Hendrie, senior vice president of marketing for Uno’s. He said the company received “a very, very modest rumbling” of complaint about the Henry fundraiser. The event “went without a hitch,” Hendrie said. “It was a great event. The restaurant was festive … It’s part of what we do to support the community.” Uhlman acknowledged that he made a mistake in using his work email to write Uno’s. “I was a little distraught that a police officer was severely injured (in the Henry incident) and may never walk again,” Uhlman said. “I sympathize with the family that their son died, but what about the police officer that may never walk again or hold a job again?” Hess, the officer who shot Henry, underwent knee surgery following the incident and is expected to return to work soon, his union said last week. Ford, the other Brockton officer who sent an email about the fundraiser, could not be reached for comment. Vicki-Ann Downing may be reached at vdowning@enterprisenews.com. Read more: http://www.patriotledger.com/archive/x1294651442/Some-Brockton-police-officers-object-to-fundraiser-in-memory-of-Danroy-DJ-Henry-of-Easton#ixzz1KG0W0c8J

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Pace student’s kin file wrongful death lawsuit

Pace student’s kin file wrongful death lawsuit Photo by Steven Senne By Marie Szaniszlo and Laura Crimaldi  |   Thursday, April 21, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage The Easton family of a slain Pace University football player said a wrongful death suit filed yesterday in federal court, accusing a New York police officer of “reckless disregard for human life” in his shooting, is intended to force the release of information on the case. The lawsuit claims Pleasantville Police officer Aaron Hess violated Danroy “D.J.” Henry Jr.’s civil rights when Henry was shot outside a local bar. “The one thing we want most, we can’t have,” Danroy Henry Sr. told the Herald yesterday. “We will never have our son back. But this gives us subpoena power to gain access to information we have been denied.” The family is seeking Hess’ testimony about the shooting, his personnel file, 911 recordings and video from businesses at the scene the night of the shooting, he said. The suit, which also names the village of Pleasantville as a defendant, seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. Henry, a junior at Pace, was leaving a homecoming game celebration at the bar Oct. 17, when he was shot. Neither Hess nor Village Administrator Patricia Dwyer could be reached yesterday for comment. Authorities said Henry, 20, was fatally shot when he ignored police instructions to stop his vehicle and headed directly at Hess, forcing him onto the hood. The officer fired four shots to protect himself, police said, before he was thrown to the ground. But several witnesses disputed that account, saying Henry drove away because an officer had ordered him to leave the fire lane. Those witnesses said Hess jumped in front of the vehicle, and Henry did not have enough time to stop. Henry was handcuffed and put on the sidewalk, where he lay dying, according to their testimony. A grand jury declined to indict Hess. But the U.S. Justice Department is investigating. Earlier this month, the Pleasantville Police Benevolent Association named Hess, who underwent knee surgery, “Officer of the Year,” an honor that outraged Henry’s family. “It speaks to the level of arrogance we have had to deal with,” Henry’s father said. “One has to wonder if this group sees themselves as above the laws they’re sworn to uphold.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1332289

Archie Bunker Award, Justice, Police, Crime, Law and Public Safety, News

Blackstonian Presents the Archie Bunker Award to Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association

BLACKSTONIAN EXCLUSIVE The Blackstonian would like to present the Archie Bunker award for foreward thought and outstanding achievement in intellekchewalism to The Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association The Pax Centurion Editor James Carnell Editor’s Note: I couldn’t find a photo anywhere of James Carnell, which may be a blessing if his physical appearance is as ugly as his thoughts and attitude or perhaps he has cracked too many lenses in his day so let’s just imagine him… think Half Elmer Fudd and 3/4 Porky…. (yes I know the math is right) The award is being made now it will be presented shortly it has taken us some time… you wouldn’t believe how difficult it is to get a trophy fashioned into the shape of an anus. Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association (BPPA) The Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association which is Union for BPD Officers, the very same Union that has fought tooth and nail for well over a decade over every issue that came up for Affirmative Action or improvements in Hiring/Promotions within the BPD. They are the Union which has fought MAMLEO (Mass. Assoc. of Minority Law Enforcement Officials) at every juncture where equality and diversity was in question. This is also the same Union which produces a racially charged and clearly uber-conservative publication which forces you to wax nostalgic about the Good Ole Days with the Good Ole Boys circa 1950 The Pax Centurion http://www.bppa.org/PAX/default.asp If you go there right now you can find such intellectual insights and colorful terms like “yummie (young urban maggot)” which really can give you a perspective on the thought process of many of OUR “Public Servants” these are the people who are supposed to Serve and Protect us. http://www.bppa.org/bppaems/pax/story3_may05.asp Or really just check this out from the Feb. Edition (ironically in Black History Month) where he calls the young teenage man brutalized by Police a “scumbag” By Jim Carnell, Pax Editor Many of us may have missed the Globe and Herald editions dated Jan. 23rd about a rather unique and interesting exhibition by the staff of the Boston Police Academy designed for local politicians, media, and community activists. (“In defense of the proper use of force”, Boston Herald, Peter Gelzinis, 1-23-11, and “Police give lessons in how they use force”, Boston Globe, Maria Cramer, 1-23-11). The exhibition was designed after much criticism was heaped upon the department following a “You-tube” video which appeared on-line after the arrest of a young scumbag who resisted arrest at Roxbury Community College last fall http://www.bppa.org/PAX/PAX%20JabFeb%202011.pdf Need More Proof of the infinite ability to promote stupidity? http://oneminutelawyer.com/?p=10560 In the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association newspaper, Pax Centurion, is a cartoon of President Obama dressed as a superhero dubbed “Obama Dog.’’ According to the Boston Globe, another page shows a picture of the First Couple, their left hands over their hearts, instead of their right, as they salute the flag. “Americans?!? Are they really?!?’ So Jeers to you… It couldn’t be a more deserving award for a master of the asinine. Please Join us in our Public Condemnation of these statements… check out these links. http://www.xtraxtra.com/bostoncom.php/posting/showz/id/3719249

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