Rutherford | Police in a small Georgia town tasered a 5-foot-2, 87-year-old woman who was using a kitchen knife to cut dandelions for use in a recipe.
Police claim they had no choice but to taser the old woman, who does
not speak English but was smiling at police to indicate she was
friendly, because she failed to comply with orders to put down the
knife.
Police in California are being sued for using excessive force against a deaf 76-year-old woman who was allegedly jaywalking and
failed to halt when police yelled at her. According to the lawsuit,
police searched the woman and her grocery bags. She was then slammed to
the ground, had a foot or knee placed behind her neck or back,
handcuffed, arrested and cited for jaywalking and resisting arrest.
In Alabama, police first tasered then shot and killed an unarmed man who refused to show his driver’s license after attempting to turn in a stray dog he’d
found to the local dog shelter. The man’s girlfriend and their three
children, all under the age of 10, witnessed the shooting.
In New York, Customs and Border Protection officers have come under fire for subjecting female travelers (including minors) to random body searches that
include strip searches while menstruating, genital probing, and forced
pelvic exams, X-rays and intravenous drugs at area hospitals.
At a California gas station, ICE agents surrounded a man who was taking his pregnant wife to the hospital to deliver their baby,
demanding that he show identification. Having forgotten his documents
at home in the rush to get to the hospital, the husband offered to go
get them. Refusing to allow him to do so, ICE agents handcuffed and
arrested the man for not having an ID with him, leaving his wife to find
her way alone to the hospital. The father of five, including the
newborn, has lived and worked in the U.S. for 12 years with his wife.
These are not isolated incidents.
These cases are legion.
This is what a state of undeclared martial law looks like, when you
can be arrested, tasered, shot, brutalized and in some cases killed
merely for not complying with a government agent’s order or not
complying fast enough.
This isn’t just happening in crime-ridden inner cities.
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