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Anonymous Vs. Ferguson Police Department ~ PHASE ONE

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  • Vincent Godfrey Lieutenant 346 07/20/1987
  • Richard Hart Police Officer 354 09/05/1988
  • Daniel Biermann Lieutenant 360 05/30/1989
  • Timothy Green Detective 361 06/05/1989
  • Matthew Stringer Police Officer 481 02/14/2000
  • Peggye Fowler Police Clerk 484 06/23/2000
  • Patrick O’Fallon Police Officer (K-9) 474 10/18/1999
  • Matthew Thompson Police Officer 475
  • Allen Jones Communications 457 11/30/1998
  • Kathy Anderson Police Clerk 458 12/08/1998
  • Richard Pfaff Detective Sergeant 436
  • Philip Busby Police Officer (Traffic) 438 08/18/1997
  • Sharon Crawford Communications 387 06/14/1993
  • Timothy Fagan Captain 395 08/18/1994
  • Scott Sachs Sergeant 371 06/27/1991
  • Brian Bethmann Police Officer 383 01/27/1993
  • David Houghton Police Officer 365 11/27/1989
  • Richard Kohnen Police Officer (SRO) 370
  • Randy Boden Captain 362 08/14/1989
  • Timothy Lowery Chief of Police 363 08/14/1989
  • Daniel Biermann Lieutenant 360 05/30/1989
  • Timothy Green Detective 361 06/05/1989
  • Richard Burns Communications 580 10/02/2008
  • Anthony Mocca Detective 584 12/22/2008
  • Daniel Howard Police Officer 575 07/16/2008
  • Amel Topcagic Police Officer 576 07/21/2008
  • Barb Hale Communications 571 02/05/2008
  • Mark Lorthridge Police Officer 574 06/30/2008
  • Michael Arthur Police Officer 570 01/09/2008
  • Steve Neuhauser Police Officer 569 01/16/2008
  • Freddie Lee Police Officer (SRO) 563 09/17/2007
  • Gary Niemann Police Officer 564 12/11/2007
  • Michele Arthur Clerk 558 10/09/2006
  • Grant West Detective 560 12/07/2006
  • Patrick O’Neill Police Officer 555 01/02/2006
  • Timothy Sweeso Detective 557 06/26/2006
  • Chris Bockelmann Police Officer 553 09/12/2005
  • Mark Pounders Sergeant 554 12/12/2005
  • David Rohlfing Detective 548 05/30/2005
  • Shaunta Williams Police Officer 552 08/15/2005
  • Mary Mansker Clerk Typist 629 10/28/2013
  • Kevin Fodde Police Officer 630 12/17/2013
  • Dacia Hill Corrections 626 08/19/2013
  • David Kowalewski Police Officer 627 08/12/2013
  • Neal Booth Dispatcher 624 07/10/2013
  • Anyia Kennedy Clerk Typist 625 08/07/2013
  • Kyle Feldman Police Officer 623 06/24/2013
  • Dio Foster Reserve/Park Police 622 07/08/2013

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SWAT Team Shows Up In Ferguson, Detains Reporters Live Tweeting Their Actions
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We’ve been debating internally whether or not to cover the mess that is currently going on in Ferguson, Missouri. There has been plenty of attention paid to the protests and the failures by police there — and we frequently cover problems with police, as well as the militarization of police, which was absolutely on display in Ferguson (if you’ve been under a rock, police killed an unarmed teenager there last week, leading to protests over the past few days — and the police have been handling the situation… poorly, to say the least). However, the situation was changing so rapidly, it wasn’t entirely clear what to cover. The pictures from Ferguson of a very militarized police force were disturbing, and we’ve been thinking about writing something on that (and we may still). However, this evening, things got even more ridiculous, as not only did the SWAT team show up, but it then arrested two of the reporters who had been covering the events: Wesley Lowery of the Washington Post and Ryan Reilly of the Huffington Post. Both had been vital in getting out the story of what was happening on the street.

Here are a few of their tweets (prior to being arrested):

Click HERE for a complete report on the Reporters who were handcuffed and detained after tweeting unfolding events of the protest against the Ferguson police.

Ferguson Police Department’s Race Relations in Spotlight

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The Ferguson Police Department in Missouri has found itself in the national spotlight this week after one of its officers shot and killed unarmed black teenager Michael Brown in broad daylight Saturday.

Images of the police clashing with protesters have highlighted the racial tensions in the town. Many of the protesters are black, while the police force is nearly entirely white.

The police department has three black officers and 47 white officers, or about 6 percent black officers, according to the Ferguson police chief. The city of Ferguson, meanwhile, is about 68 percent African American, according to U.S. Census data.

Brown, 18, was shot multiple times by the unidentified officer, police said. His body lay slain on the sidewalk for hours as first Ferguson police and then the St. Louis County Police Department processed the scene, drawing immediate criticism aimed at the police for not removing his body more quickly.

Though the St. Louis County PD has taken over the investigation into the shooting, Ferguson police have been on the forefront of clashes with protesters in the days since Brown’s death. They have been criticized by Brown’s family, as well as the Rev. Al Sharpton and NAACP leaders, for not naming the shooting officer and for their heavily-armed response to protesters.

On Sunday night, violence erupted in Ferguson after the protests, as some individuals vandalized and looted stores, set fires and vandalized patrol cars. Protests resumed Monday night and Tuesday night without looting, but Ferguson police continued to fire rubber bullets and tear gas into crowds of demonstrators as they instructed everyone to go back to their homes.

One of the demands of protesters this weekend, printed on a flier handed out to crowds, was for a police force that more accurately represents the racial makeup of the community.

Protesters said that blacks have long been targeted by police.

“We have to stick together because we are targets,” Robert Bredfford, an African-American 26-year-old, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch at the protests on Sunday.

“There’s a lot of talk about mentoring. I’m going to be working with the U.S. Justice Department community relations people to improve relations between the community particularly the young black males,” Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson told ABC News following the unrest.

Statistics from the state attorney general back up that claim, showing that in 2013, police pulled over black drivers 4,632 times and white drivers 686 times. Even after accounting for the difference in the number of black residents and white residents living in the city, blacks are pulled over at a 37 percent higher rate.

The data also show that blacks were twice as likely to be searched and arrested and African Americans in Missouri were 66 percent more likely to be stopped by police in 2013, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

But those numbers have to be taken in the context of the region, according to criminal justice expert David Klinger, associate professor of criminology and criminal justice at the University of Missouri at St. Louis.

“This area is surrounded by areas with a higher concentration of black population than the city, so when we do an analysis we need to look at that whole area. It’s entirely possible that what is going on here is that it’s not just residents [being pulled over],” Klinger said.

“The real issue is not who gets stopped, unless there is evidence showing that they are stopping black people in a disproportionate number, but how are the stops being conducted?” Klinger said.

The Ferguson Police Department does not have a record of racial profiling or transgressions. But the NAACP has an active complaint against the St. Louis County Police Department, according to the St. Louis Post Dispatch. But Klinger said that the St. Louis metropolitan area is on par with other cities in terms of relations between white police officers and black residents.

“To my knowledge there’s nothing more than the standard tensions in policing. I could be missing something but I’m unaware of any civil disturbance, on a large scale. Certainly nothing like the Los Angeles riots,” he said.

The Ferguson Police Department and police union did not respond to requests for comment by ABC News. The Missouri state Fraternal Order of Police also did not respond.

“Any time you have any population that is relatively deprived, for lack of a better term, and has fewer resources, there’s going to be resentment,” Klinger said. “Unfortunately these types of communities have higher crime, so these communities will have a higher police presence because good people need more protection from knuckleheads,” he said.

“My understanding is there’s nothing out of round in my current community as opposed to Los Angeles or New York or Washington, D.C.,” he concluded. “It goes with the territory that there’s going to be some tensions.”

http://abcnews.go.com/US/ferguson-police-departments-race-relations-spotlight/story?id=24962153



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