Message from @retiredDep
Discord ID: 472838279549550592
lol
3 KILLED, 12 WOUNDED: Three people were killed and 12 others were wounded Friday in gun violence across Chicago. In a single shooting Friday, three children, ages 10 to 14, were among four people wounded in a West Side Lawndale neighborhood shooting. http://bit.ly/2On7qvD
Chicago and state officials released a plan Friday to carry out far-reaching police reforms under federal court supervision more than a year after a U.S. Justice Department investigation found a longstanding history of civil rights violations by the police department.
It's not yet clear if anybody has been injured: https://abc7.ws/2veaEZP
@Skeeve Where can we get the MAGA cards? Are they only produced digital?
Police say the child victims range from 2 to 10 years old. The adult was 26: https://abc7.ws/2AiB9mr
Sistertoo, I only know of them digital.
ROSWELL, Ga. (AP) — Two Georgia police officers who used a simulated coin toss to decide whether to arrest a woman during a traffic stop have been fired.
Roswell city spokeswoman Julie Brechbill tells The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that Courtney Brown and Kristee Wilson were fired Thursday, weeks after video of the April stop surfaced. The officers had been on administrative leave.
The footage showed them using a cellphone app mimicking a coin toss to decide whether to arrest Sarah Webb, who’d been pulled over for speeding. The decision to flip the virtual coin was made after Brown discovered her radar gun wasn’t working. Although the result of the toss indicated Webb should be released, she was arrested anyway.
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Charges against Webb were later dropped.
Roswell Mayor Lori Henry called the officers’ behavior “inexcusable and unprofessional.”
A U.S. Postal Service employee from Inglewood and his half-brother pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from an alleged burglary and multiple armed robberies of mail trucks — crimes resulting in nearly $240,000 in cash being stolen, the Department of Justice announced Friday.
William Crosby, the employee, knew when mail trucks were transporting cash from money order and merchandise sales because he used to work as a supervisor, according to federal prosecutors. That information is not known to all Postal Service employees, a indictment in the case states.