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Hall Of Shame:Idiots All Around- Articles

bossi

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Similar to the concept of a lighthouse, warning seafarers of dangerous shoals ... here's the Hall Of Shame - a thread where you can stick a head onto a pike as a warning to others, where unethical behaviour can be pilloried, where rocks can be overturned and slugs exposed.

Thoreau said something to the effect:
"Who serves his country best?  The wise man with his intellect, the brave soldier with his courage, or the honest man with his conscience?"

Here, let's look at corrupt cops, cowardly leaders, spineless politicians ... (and make sure we heed the lesson ...)

Cumque mones aliquem, nec se velit ille moneri,
Si tibi sit carus, noli desistere coeptis.
-- Cato


(When you warn somebody who does not want to be warned,
If he is dear to you, do not desist in what you have begun.)


Police unit faces internal probe
CAL MILLAR, JOHN DUNCANSON AND NICOLAAS VAN RIJN
STAFF REPORTERS

Toronto police have suspended one officer and disbanded the plainclothes unit at downtown 52 Division as part of a major internal affairs investigation into police corruption.

A police source said the investigation began after allegations that some suspects had been "shaken down" for cash or other valuables after being arrested.

Complaints were also received from bar and club owners in the downtown entertainment district after they allegedly received demands for cash, police sources said.

Mark Pugash, a spokesperson for Toronto police, last night confirmed the investigation, but remained mum on the details.

The responsibilities of the plainclothes unit at 52 Division, which covers much of the downtown area, include policing bars and clubs to ensure they're complying with regulations that govern the sale of alcoholic drinks.

The unit also deals with street crime and prostitutes.

Investigators yesterday suspended Constable Bill McCormack, a plainclothes officer and the son of former Toronto police chief William McCormack, who headed the police service from 1989 to 1995.

Police sources said the officer was suspended after he refused to speak with internal affairs investigators.

"An officer has been suspended, and it's an ongoing investigation, so we can't comment at this time," said Andrew Clarke, director of uniformed services for the Toronto Police Association.

"No charges have been laid, and the officer involved is entitled to fair process."

Officers assigned to 52 Division were informed of the investigation yesterday and were told that all members of the division's plainclothes unit would be transferred from the office by Monday.

As part of the ongoing police investigation, internal affairs officers are attempting to interview a number of officers assigned to the plainclothes unit, as well as other police officers working at 52 Division on Dundas St. W. near University Ave., including uniformed officers and detectives.

As part of their probe, sources said, internal affairs investigators set up surveillance equipment and carried out other investigative techniques in the offices occupied by the plainclothes unit at 52 Division.

Investigators have executed search warrants on more than a dozen police lockers at the downtown division, as well as searching an officer's Uxbridge home and his car.

It's the latest black eye for the police service, which earlier this year was rocked when six veteran drug squad officers were charged following the longest and costliest investigation into alleged corruption in the Toronto force.

The officers are alleged to have lied in court, made up bogus search warrants, falsified internal police records, and fabricated potential evidence in their notebooks, according to RCMP Chief Superintendent John Neily.

The RCMP, called in to investigate the Toronto officers, laid 40 charges against the six officers, who are accused of committing 22 Criminal Code offences.

"Police officers are not above the law," Neily told a news conference in January.

Last year a Kingston mother of two won a $54,000 settlement after she complained of being strip-searched at the station, in plain view of male officers watching a hockey game.

The incident led to the force adopting a more stringent strip-search policy.
 
Thats what we need...another black eye for the cops!

Slim
 
It is sad to see but it least it is being dealt with, not swept under the carpet. Oh well I still intend on becoming one of the the boys in "dark" blue.
 
TO has alot of good cops. Problem is their citizens have hated them for so long that the force has become a "us vs them" institution. They have a huge uphill battle. My uncle is a Homi.Det there and hes an amazing cop. He‘s been shot twice in 2 seperate incidents. TO can be a warzone for a cop trying to do his job.
 
Man faces charges for shower photos of soldiers
(just think - he could have bought a "skin mag", but now he‘s facing court-martial and a dishonourable discharge ... sure hope his voyeurism was worth it ... but we all know it wasn‘t ... )

Man faces charges for shower photos of soldiers
Associated Press

WALNUT CREEK, Calif. â ” A former National Guard commander accused of photographing naked female U.S. soldiers as they showered at Iraq‘s Abu Ghraib prison faces legal proceedings, officials said.

Capt. Leo Merck, 32, of Fremont, Calif., allegedly took the photos Nov. 12 and was turned in the next day by the three women.

Merck and the women were part of the 870th Military Police Company of Pittsburg, which patrolled parts of the same prison where other U.S. soldiers photographed their humiliating treatment of naked Iraqi prisoners.

Soldiers from the 870th passed through the army‘s Fort Lewis in Washington state last month after leaving Iraq, where they served on active duty for just over a year. Merck has been ordered to return to Fort Lewis to face legal action.

Officials at Fort Lewis said they didn‘t know his whereabouts. Calls to his home in Fremont were not returned.

A spokeswoman for Merck‘s local National Guard company said Friday he will face "the process in which soldiers are held accountable under the Uniform Code of Military Justice." She did not say whether Merck would face a court-martial.

Earlier this week, the Contra Costa Times reported that Merck, an accountant in civilian life, had been stripped of his command and could face a dishonourable discharge or court-martial.
 
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