General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Judge won't grant immunity to police, doctor who medically paralyzed man for cavity search [View all]Savannahmann
(3,891 posts)Disprove it if you can.
Fact. When excessive force is discovered, normally by video the police were unaware of, all the reports of the incident match, but do not match the video. There are two explanations for this. The officers involved took time after the event to concoct a plausible story. This would be at a minimum conspiracy, a felony. There are too many such incidents to justify this argument though. Too chancy that one of the notional good cops would refuse to go along. Too risky to use the excessive force, and would not explain the chanting of stop resisting that all the cops say.
Option two. Each officer is trained to lie. This would preclude the need to get the stor straight in detail. It could be managed with a simple he lunged at me. If you lie when describing events where life and limb is lost. You can not be a good cop. You are lying under oath. Perjury is a felony.
The last good cop was Frank Serpico. Interesting isn't it that none of the cops who lie about the incident are ever punished.