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Search resuls for: "The Sacramento Police Department"


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“I got out of the car with hands up and back turned toward the officers,” Stewart said. Stewart asked her son to stay put, but the officer said it was OK and asked him to also come over. “He weighs 56 pounds and is 3-foot-10.” Even in his football uniform, Stewart said her son looks small. Both mother and son stood sobbing along the side of the freeway in disbelief, Stewart said, her son turning to her to make sense of it. Brandon is not yet comfortable speaking about the incident, so Stewart is seeking a therapist for her son.
Persons: , ” Shanice Stewart, ” Stewart, Brandon, , That’s, ’ ”, Stewart Organizations: CNN, The Sacramento Police Department Locations: Sacramento , California, California
Police officers involved in the deaths have become an intense focus of investigation, protest, and media coverage. Despite being at the heart of some of the most defining incidents in modern policing, most of the officers involved continue to live their lives under the radar. Insider's review of 72 cops involved in two dozen of the most notorious police killings of the past 30 years shows the many different paths officers have taken. There's no nationwide view into what happens to officers involved in egregious incidents of violence. In rare cases, cops involved in these killings have tried to publicly rehabilitate their image rather than seek out anonymity.
The data disclosure deliberately targeted Asian Americans, with resulting disproportionate penalties against those of Asian descent, the suit says. “It’s unacceptable that two public agencies would carelessly flout state law and utility customers’ privacy rights, and even more unacceptable that they targeted a specific community in doing so,” she said in a statement. Private utilities like Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric are barred from disclosing customer utility data to law enforcement without a court order under state law and California Public Utility Commission rules, he said. Public utilities like SMUD aren’t regulated by the commission, but state law bars them “from disclosing entire neighborhoods’ worth of data to law enforcement absent a court order or ongoing investigation,” Mackey said. Southern California Edison’s policy generally requires a warrant or subpoena to share information with law enforcement.
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