PDA

View Full Version : Ladies: Being raped by a cop? Better just lay back and enjoy it.




Anti Federalist
11-26-2012, 01:59 PM
The heroic Will Grigg.



Predators with Impunity

http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2012/11/predators-with-impunity.html

If resisting arrest is a crime, does a woman have the right to resist a sexual assault by a police officer?

Last May 5th, Magdelena Mol, a young wife and mother from Burbank, Illinois, went to a nearby village called Justice to visit a friend. Shortly after midnight,
Mrs. Mol called a taxi and went to a street corner to wait for her ride. A few minutes later, a police officer named Carmen Scardine drove by, then stopped in the middle of the street and ordered Mol to get into his car.

Although Scardine demanded identification from Mol and called the dispatcher to run her name, he never explained why he had taken her into custody. When the taxi arrived a few minutes later, the officer ordered the driver to leave. He then drove the terrified young woman to a secluded area and sexually assaulted her.

On the following day, Mrs. Mol filed an official complaint, which was upheld by the Justice Police Department. She has filed a lawsuit against the department and the Village of Justice – but there is no record that Scardine has been charged with a crime, or even subjected to official discipline.

“As far as I know, he’s still on the force,” stated a dispatcher for the Village of Justice Police Department (which is no stranger to corruption) when asked about Carmen Scardine’s status on November 21.

The facts asserted by Mrs. Mol in her lawsuit aren’t in dispute. Why wasn’t her assailant prosecuted for sexual assault? If Scardine had been charged with that crime, he may have been able to claim that the victim had consented to the act – because she didn’t resist. Of course, if she had resisted, she most likely would have been prosecuted for resisting arrest or even aggravated assault on a police officer – assuming that the victim survived the officer’s attempts to “subdue” her.

Pittsburgh resident Sarah Smith had an experience very similar to that of Magdelena Mol. One morning several years ago, Smith was in a minor traffic accident with a man on a motorcycle. Smith had let her liability insurance lapse, and she was driving on an expired license, so she was probably already in a state of panic when Pittsburgh Police Officer Adam Skweres arrived. Smith’s unease catalyzed into terror when the officer pulled her aside and offered to let her traffic violations slide as part of a carnal transaction.

Officer Skweres told Smith that "he could make it look like [the accident] was my fault or he could give the driver a ticket for failure to obey signs," she recalled in an interview with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. The price of a favorable assessment would take the form of unspecified sexual favors, and Skweres quite generously promised that what he would demand of Smith would not be "as bad as what would happen to me in jail." Such a deal!

On the other hand, if Smith put up a fight, Skweres warned, she would be arrested for resisting arrest, handcuffed, and then raped in the back seat of the police car. Before the officer could make good on his threat, the situation changed, and he agreed to let the terrified young woman go -- but only after gesturing to his gun and warning her that "If you say anything about this I'll make sure you never walk, talk, or breathe again."

Smith reported the incident to the Pittsburgh Police Bureau. Complaints were filed by two other women endured nearly identical threats from Skweres (one of whom, a woman embroiled in a child custody dispute, was told that she could purchase a favorable recommendation to the child welfare bureaucracy in exchange for oral sex). The uniformed predator was allowed to continue patrolling the streets -- and to collect his $57,000 annual salary – until last February 17, when he was arrested for sexually assaulting a young woman in her home six days earlier.

The victim in the February 11 assault was a woman whose boyfriend was in jail. After asking the victim if she was wearing a wire, and turning on the kitchen faucet to conceal any potentially incriminating noises, Skweres explained the nature of the transaction: He would "help" her boyfriend in exchange for sex. After forcing the traumatized woman to service him, the cop cleaned himself up with a paper towel and left.

Skweres was as predictable as he was persistent. Last December, he had paid a similar visit to Melissa Watkins, whose boyfriend was also in jail. She was alone with her young daughter when the cop materialized to proposition her.

"He locked my front door and everything, he said, `so no one could bother us,'" Watkins told the Post-Gazette. Unzipping his uniform trousers, Skweres offered the same arrangement: He would "help" Watkins' boyfriend in consideration of sexual services. Watkins -- despite being utterly terrified -- refused.

"There's a man with a badge and a gun in front of you, trying to proposition you," she recalled. "You don't know which way it's going to go."

Four alleged victims have testified against Skweres in a preliminary hearing last March. Since that time, a fifth woman has filed a criminal complaint against him. While he refuses to characterize his accusers as liars, the former police officer insists that he always carried out his duty “with integrity and honesty” and maintains that he is “absolutely” innocent of the charges against him.

Displaying the capacity for self-preoccupation typical of the tax-feeding class, Skweres protested that his arrest and prosecution have “turned my life upside down.” An Army reservist who served in Iraq, Skweres was initially rejected by the police academy when a psychologist found him unsuited to police work, but he was awarded a slot following an appeal to the civil service commission. Reports of his predatory behavior began surfacing about eighteen months after Skweres joined the force.

As of 2008, there were roughly 600,000 state and local police officers in the United States. If former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper is correct, at least 30,000 of them are active sexual predators.

On-duty sexual predation by police officers “happens far more often than people in the business are willing to admit,” Stamper warns in his memoir Breaking Rank: A Top Cop's Expose of the Dark Side of American Policing. “My cautious guess is that about 5 percent of America's cops are on the prowl for women. In a department the size of Seattle's that's sixty-three police officers. In San Diego [where Stamper began his police career], 145. In New York City, 2,000. The average patrol cop makes anywhere from ten to twenty unsupervised contacts a shift. If he's on the make, chances are a predatory cop will find you. Or your wife, your partner, your daughter, your sister, your mother, your friend."

The targets of opportunity for a predatory police officer could also include your troubled teenage son – a grim fact illustrated by the case of former Idaho police officer Ruben Delgadillo.

Shortly after Delgadillo graduated from the Idaho Police Academy, the Governor’s Task Force on Children at Risk held a conference to examine how to deal with child predators. That event included specialized training for school resource officers. Delgadillo, who was assigned to be a school resource officer in the Caldwell School District, would have attended some of those sessions and probably took detailed notes.

In 2008, Delgadillo was assigned to be a school resource officer at Vallivue High School. As a member of the school suspension board, he encountered a troubled freshman named Brennan Nicholson. After a suspension hearing, Delgadillo met with Nicholson and his mother and suggested that he could mentor the young man. This allowed him to make practical use of the instruction he had received regarding the vulnerabilities of at-risk teenagers.

The officer lavished attention on the boy. Eventually he persuaded the youngster to spend the night at a house he shared with his supervisor, Sergeant Mike Larimer. During those sleep-overs Delgadillo repeatedly molested the teenager. Larimer was aware of the crimes and did nothing to intervene. When the victim finally disclosed what was happening, Delgadillo initially claimed that the acts had been consensual; after all, the youngster hadn’t resisted.

According to Nicholson’s lawsuit, the victim initially “did not report Delgadillo because was in fear he would be retaliated against if he did not allow the abuse, because Delgadillo and his roommate, Larimer, were `the police’…. Delgadillo told [Nicholson] that he had ties to gangs, intimidating Brennan into remaining silent.”

Delgadillo was eventually prosecuted and was sentenced to a term of three to ten years in prison for felony injury to a child. However, District Judge Thomas Ryan retained jurisdiction over the case, which meant that Delgadillo was released on probation after serving only a year in the Canyon County Jail. This arrangement was made after Delgadillo tearfully expressed fears of what would happen to him in prison as a former police officer and convicted child molester.

The most significant advantage wielded by uniformed predators is not their physical size or even their arsenal; it's their ability to criminalize even the most tentative act of resistance on the part of their potential victims. As Gregory J. Babbitt, assistant prosecuting attorney for Michigan’s Ottawa County, admitted during oral argument before the state supreme court last October, under most “resisting and obstructing” statutes a police officer who sexually assaults a prisoner can press charges if the victim puts up physical resistance.

Babbitt was representing the state of Michigan in the case of People v. Moreno, which examined the question of whether a citizen has a legally protected right to resist an unlawful search or unjustified arrest by a police officer. Associate justice Michael Cavanaugh asked Babbitt if a female inmate who put up a struggle while being sexually assaulted during a body search could be charged under the state’s “resisting and obstructing” statute.

“Technically, you could do that,” Babbitt admitted, hastily insisting that “as a prosecutor, I wouldn’t do that.” Rather than putting up physical resistance and thereby risking criminal prosecution, he continued, the victim should simply endure the assault and then file a civil complaint after the fact.

If a woman being sexually assaulted by a police officer could be prosecuted for resisting, “what is left of the Fourth Amendment?” Cavanaugh asked Babbitt.

With an indifferent shrug, Babbitt replied, “Well, life isn’t perfect.” From his perspective it is simply unacceptable for a mere Mundane to “make the determination as to whether the police officers [are] acting properly or not.”

Like most members of the state’s punitive caste, Babbitt maintains that there is never a situation in which a citizen can physically resist a police officer. “We can’t have individuals ... making that decision in the heat of the moment,” he insisted, even if that means leaving women like Magdelena Mol -- and terrified teenage boys like Brennan Nicholson -- at the mercy of sociopathic predators in government-issued costumes.

Origanalist
11-26-2012, 02:03 PM
Last May 5th, Magdelena Mol, a young wife and mother from Burbank, Illinois, went to a nearby village called Justice to visit a friend.
:(

jmdrake
11-26-2012, 02:04 PM
And all of this happened in the "Village of Justice"?

Anti Federalist
11-26-2012, 02:05 PM
And all of this happened in the "Village of Justice"?

Well, the first case did.

Sick irony...sometimes I really have to think God is doing nothing but laughing his ass off at us.

Matt Collins
11-26-2012, 02:13 PM
But the important question is, can she get pregnant?




/sarcasm :p

Nirvikalpa
11-26-2012, 02:32 PM
Cops know this. I have no respect for men in police uniforms, and distrust them all. My female partner at my old EMS company had her ass grabbed and held (it wasn't just a mistake brush-by) by a cop while on call. Guy had a wife and 4 kids at home. I won't stand near a cop on calls unless it's face to face, and I make sure someone else is with me.

I definitely believe it.

CaptainAmerica
11-26-2012, 02:39 PM
If that ever happened to anyone I knew I would want to find that person and make sure they lose their man parts forever.

dannno
11-26-2012, 02:41 PM
Yep, probably best to just close your eyes and picture John Stamos.

fisharmor
11-26-2012, 02:42 PM
All those years of cops telling women not to resist non-uniformed rapists suddenly makes sense now.

ninepointfive
11-26-2012, 02:51 PM
never thought of this sick and disgusting aspect of law enforcement before.

phill4paul
11-26-2012, 02:55 PM
If that ever happened to anyone I knew I would want to find that person and make sure they lose their man parts forever.

I've put people in hospitals for this kinda shit. Even to the extent of tracking them to another state. If more people did it would lessen a considerable degree.

John F Kennedy III
11-26-2012, 02:56 PM
1. Go with the flow

2. Risk death to avoid rape


Welcome to Amerika. Better start practicing your goosestep.

Philhelm
11-26-2012, 03:11 PM
1. Go with the flow

2. Risk death to avoid rape


Welcome to Amerika. Better start practicing your goosestep.

Even better to start practicing your marksmanship.

AGRP
11-26-2012, 03:15 PM
The Village of Just-Us

Occam's Banana
11-26-2012, 03:20 PM
You can be certain that stories like those in the OP are just the tip of the iceberg. They're just the ones that have come to light because the victims actually had the fortitude to say something. For every one of them, how many other victims remain silent out of fear, shame, etc.?

Politics & law enforcement are the two most concentrated locuses of sociopathy in existence.

There are a few - a very few - "good" politicians & cops (folks like Ron Paul & Regina Tasca come to mind in this respect).

The rest, however, are either outright sociopaths or "go along to get along" enablers.

About this there can be no doubt whatsoever.

phill4paul
11-26-2012, 03:20 PM
Gives a whole new meaning to a "Beaver Trap."

http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTNs8ilpKLLWD8QyqKx4DqbUXtanuQNM abn44ZGDTMCRsAPAkD6

heavenlyboy34
11-26-2012, 03:32 PM
Even better to start practicing your marksmanship.
Also a good idea to learn self-defense and the most vulnerable parts of an opponent's body (like the throat).

heavenlyboy34
11-26-2012, 03:34 PM
You can be certain that stories like those in the OP are just the tip of the iceberg. They're just the ones that have come to light because the victims actually had the fortitude to say something. For every one of them, how many other victims remain silent out of fear, shame, etc.?

Politics & law enforcement are the two most concentrated locuses of sociopathy in existence.

There are a few - a very few - "good" politicians & cops (folks like Ron Paul & Regina Tasca come to mind in this respect).

The rest, however, are either outright sociopaths or "go along to get along" enablers.

About this there can be no doubt whatsoever.
Indeed. Reminds me of "Why The Worst Get On Top" (F.A. Hayek).

PaulConventionWV
11-26-2012, 03:45 PM
never thought of this sick and disgusting aspect of law enforcement before.

Yep. Sleazebags are over-represented in the police force compared to the general population. On the lower 5% you've got the rapists and molesters, just up the scale from 6-50% are the cops who get away with murdering a suspect. The 51-95% are the cops who will beat you senseless for nothing other than pissing them off, and the top 5% are the "good" cops who are mostly assholes who do their duty enforcing unjust laws and arbitrarily punishing behavior they don't like with the stroke of a pen.

AFPVet
11-26-2012, 04:02 PM
... and some states have made it illegal to film cops. Public servants are not supposed to have privacy protections while on duty. If she had him on audio, she would have him; unfortunately, some states would call that "wiretapping".

phill4paul
11-26-2012, 05:31 PM
... and some states have made it illegal to film cops. Public servants are not supposed to have privacy protections while on duty. If she had him on audio, she would have him; unfortunately, some states would call that "wiretapping".

Excellent point.

John F Kennedy III
11-26-2012, 06:34 PM
Also a good idea to learn self-defense and the most vulnerable parts of an opponent's body (like the throat).

http://www.skystangsoodo.com/images/vital-points.gif

phill4paul
11-26-2012, 06:38 PM
http://www.skystangsoodo.com/images/vital-points.gif

This chart leaves out the eyes. Get rid of sight and you can get away.

John F Kennedy III
11-26-2012, 06:44 PM
This chart leaves out the eyes. Get rid of sight and you can get away.

How do you spell fair? W-I-N.

MikeStanart
11-26-2012, 06:45 PM
Anyone who would hide behind a badge in order to commit an act of rape doesn't deserve to exist on this earth anymore.

tod evans
11-26-2012, 07:05 PM
All 30+,000 !

[edit to quote article]

As of 2008, there were roughly 600,000 state and local police officers in the United States. If former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper is correct, at least 30,000 of them are active sexual predators.

Anti Federalist
11-26-2012, 07:21 PM
Additional claims of sexual misconduct leveled against Totten in second civil rights suit

November 9, 2012 8:29 AM
By Lawrence Smith

http://wvrecord.com/news-2580/255343-additional-claims-of-sexual-misconduct-leveled-against-totten-in-second-civil-rights-suit

MARLINTON – In addition to those leveled by Teressa Schoolcraft, Bradley C. Totten will soon have to answer allegations he used his position as a deputy sheriff to exert undue influence over a woman into sex.

Totten is named as a co-defendant in a four-count civil rights suit filed by Jessica Roberts. In her complaint filed Oct. 5 in Pocahontas Circuit Court, Roberts, 33 and of Dunmore, alleges after a chance encounter two years ago, Totten began a six-month campaign of sexually harassing her.

According to her suit, Totten on an unspecified date in August 2010 responded to a domestic violence call involving Fields and her mother. Afterwards, he drove Fields to a nearby gas station and filled her tank.

A few days later, Fields says she began receiving anonymous messages on Facebook from someone who “promised to help her handle her ongoing support case in family court” and wanted to “hang out.” The person was later revealed as Totten, she says.

In the course of one of their discussions, Fields says Totten touted his “authority to do many things, including planting something on someone.” Fearing what he might do, Fields says she relented when Totten pressured her to have sex with him on Sept. 1, 2010.

The encounter, Fields alleges, happened while Totten “was on duty and in uniform” and in his cruiser. A month later, Fields says they had another sexual encounter his in cruiser with Totten “inform(ing) other officers what he was doing over (his) CB radio.”

According to the suit, Totten secretly filmed one of the encounters. The tape has since been seized by the Federal Bureau of Investigation as part of an “ongoing investigation” of Totten.

The FBI assisted the West Virginia State Police in conducting an investigation into allegations that over the last 20 years Totten either had sex with women who were either under 16 years old at the time or were serving court-ordered sentences through the county Day Report Center while he was working as a deputy. The investigation led to two separate indictments returned against Totten by the Pocahontas County grand jury this year alleging 58 counts of sex-related crimes against eight women, including Schoolcraft.

According the suit, communication between Fields and Totten ceased until March 2011 when she started working for the prosecutor’s office. After beginning her job, Fields says Totten again not only “began pressuring (her) for sexual intercourse,” but also “began harassing her in a sexual nature at the Pocahontas County Courthouse.”

Totten’s advances were “continual and unwelcome” to the point where she quit a month later, she claims.

In her suit, Fields not only accuses Totten of civil rights violations, but also the Commission, which is named as a co-defendant, for enabling a hostile work environment, and constructive discharge. Because the Commission failed to take timely action to “adequately investigate or discipline or terminate” Totten for his actions, Fields alleges she’s suffered, among other things, emotional and mental anguish, humiliation and embarrassment and loss of income.

Fields seeks unspecified damages, interest, court costs and attorneys fees. She is represented by D. Geoff Varney with the Klie Law Offices in Buckhannon.

John F Kennedy III
11-26-2012, 07:53 PM
Anyone who would hide behind a badge in order to commit an act of rape doesn't deserve to exist on this earth anymore.

I can think of so many people who fit this bill.

John F Kennedy III
11-26-2012, 08:00 PM
Awesome that more have decided to come forward. It would be nice to see him end up in jail.

MikeStanart
11-26-2012, 10:18 PM
Awesome that more have decided to come forward. It would be nice to see him end up in jail.

I hope he receives ZERO special treatment. Throw him in the general population & let them deal with him.

EDIT: He's a cop after all, he'll probably just get probation & return to a department in another county / state.

presence
03-11-2013, 03:46 PM
UPDATE
I was going to start my own thread... but liked this thread title more :)


Thread: Ladies: Being raped by a cop? Better just lay back and enjoy it AND WAIT FOR YOUR DAY IN COURT (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?396771-Ladies-Being-raped-by-a-cop-Better-just-lay-back-and-enjoy-it/page4)




PITTSBURGH (AP) — A fired police officer will go to prison and must register as a sex offender after pleading guilty to trying to extort sexual favors from five women in exchange for his promises to help them or their boyfriends with legal issues.

Adam Skweres (http://www.sfgate.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news%2Fcrime&search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Adam+Skweres%22), 35, was a nine-year veteran officer before he was fired last year and charged by a Pittsburgh sex crimes detective with attempted involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, coercion, bribery and several other counts for incidents dating to 2008.
Skweres was immediately handcuffed after Monday's guilty plea and will be taken to prison for an agreed-upon 3 ½- to 8-year prison sentence followed by a decade of probation.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/news/crime/article/Ex-Pittsburgh-cop-pleads-guilty-to-sex-extortion-4344898.php#ixzz2NGoZPV6u

MoneyWhereMyMouthIs2
03-11-2013, 03:51 PM
This is way more positive than the update I was expecting.

presence
03-11-2013, 03:55 PM
This is way more positive than the update I was expecting.

http://www.officialpsds.com/images/thumbs/2-Dollar-Bill-Front-psd20112.png
Cop Who Beat Handcuffed Suspect Convicted, Fined $2 as Punishment (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?407191-Cop-Who-Beat-Up-Handcuffed-Suspect-Convicted-Fined-Two-Dollars-as-Punishment)




I'd hate for you to live the rest of the day totally disappointed

MoneyWhereMyMouthIs2
03-11-2013, 04:02 PM
http://www.officialpsds.com/images/thumbs/2-Dollar-Bill-Front-psd20112.png
Cop Who Beat Handcuffed Suspect Convicted, Fined $2 as Punishment (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?407191-Cop-Who-Beat-Up-Handcuffed-Suspect-Convicted-Fined-Two-Dollars-as-Punishment)




I'd hate for you to live the rest of the day totally disappointed


Already saw that. And you have it backward. (unintentionally, I think.) It is injustice that disappoints me, and no worries... It is rare I go a day without seeing or hearing about it, and usually requires I disconnect from all electronics and people. :(

tod evans
03-11-2013, 04:02 PM
If anybody has friends or family incarcerated in PA please send the newz clipping about this guy to them....

osan
03-11-2013, 04:22 PM
I would hunt him.

I would apprehend him.

I would show him tenfold the brutality.

At some point we have to stop this kind of thing and apparently the only way is to respond in those modes that lead these lowatt brutes to understanding or to their being expunged from the race of men.

Rational, free, and just people should tolerate not even a single example of such behavior and are, in fact, obliged morally to become the instruments of justice against those who violate their fellows. Find them and kill them and forget they ever were. The most minimal decency demands this.

presence
03-11-2013, 04:27 PM
Already saw that. And you have it backward. (unintentionally, I think.)

steeped in sarcasm actually

A Son of Liberty
03-11-2013, 04:56 PM
I would hunt him.

I would apprehend him.

I would show him tenfold the brutality.

At some point we have to stop this kind of thing and apparently the only way is to respond in those modes that lead these lowatt brutes to understanding or to their being expunged from the race of men.

Rational, free, and just people should tolerate not even a single example of such behavior and are, in fact, obliged morally to become the instruments of justice against those who violate their fellows. Find them and kill them and forget they ever were. The most minimal decency demands this.

Don't forget they ever were. Make the very sound of their name cause the balls of their fellow travellers to shrivel in their sacks.

tod evans
03-11-2013, 05:12 PM
At some point we have to stop this kind of thing and apparently the only way is to respond in those modes that lead these lowatt brutes to understanding or to their being expunged from the race of men.

Rational, free, and just people should tolerate not even a single example of such behavior and are, in fact, obliged morally to become the instruments of justice against those who violate their fellows. Find them and kill them and forget they ever were. The most minimal decency demands this.

In todays "society" actual justice for folks of this ilk is only meted by those who are locked away......

What does this say about society?

heavenlyboy34
03-11-2013, 05:26 PM
This chart leaves out the eyes. Get rid of sight and you can get away.
It also leaves out the ears. Give an opponent a solid ear slap, and it will deafen/disorient him long enough to continue your attack or get away.

Icymudpuppy
03-11-2013, 09:01 PM
Well, the first case did.

Sick irony...sometimes I really have to think God is doing nothing but laughing his ass off at us.

Or there is no god.

Christian Liberty
03-11-2013, 09:16 PM
If I were on a jury for a cop-killing I would vote not guilty unless I were absolutely positive that something like this didn't spark it.

I don't think that they're all bad though. Granted, they all enforce silly dictates from Washington, but they don't all do things like this.

Those that do will burn in Hell, eventually...

If you're going to get punished for resisting arrest, at least make sure the guy trying to rape you ends up dead and in Hell like he deservers..

Oh my goodness I hate the internet. I now hate the system so much I'm going insane...

jclay2
03-11-2013, 09:24 PM
And all of this happened in the "Village of Justice"?


Thought this was a satire piece from that fact. I can't distinguish reality and fiction any more. Just the other day infowars.com released this satire piece: http://www.infowars.com/student-suspended-for-thinking-of-gun-satire/. I was absolutely convinced it was real until I saw the headline had a satire comment from the editor.

BAllen
03-12-2013, 08:10 AM
Well, with that new vawa, they can make up anything they want, and the man is allowed no counsel.

osan
03-12-2013, 10:56 AM
Or there is no god.

Oh, there's a God alright. The evidence is everywhere.

What is lacking here is a correct understanding of God's nature and character.

Accept faulty premises about anything and one soon finds himself well down any one of a very large number of garden paths.

osan
03-12-2013, 11:24 AM
Also a good idea to learn self-defense and the most vulnerable parts of an opponent's body (like the throat).

Agreed, but this becomes problematic for most people. Strip-mall, tournament-oriented karoddy is not well suited for self-defense for reasons I will not here go into.

If you are going to train, you should endeavor to seek out real combat arts. Labels can be very misleading and knowing which instructor knows what he is doing v. not knowing can by very difficult. Reputation can be misleading. I will say, however, that most of the schools of "karate", "kung fu", "tae kwondo" and so forth do not cut the mustard. Most aikido is nothing more than a bunnies-and-light version of its parent, jujutsu. There ARE good aikido schools, which are really jujutsu schools with the new-agey label plastered on them.

The best bang for the buck in many places will be defensive pistol training. This will not be the case for poo-holes such as NY, NJ, CA, MA, CT, MD, IL where one is effectively prohibited from carrying any sort of firearm or just about any other defensive weapon. Doing so carries with it the legal risks. Mr. Rock, meet Mr. Hardplace.

In any event, being in my 42nd year in the combat arts I am a strong proponent of such training. It is not only a matter of physical training, but more importantly it is one of training the mind. Strategic thinking is fundamental, as is attitude.

For example, at the dojo we spend the first six months inuring newbies to verbal assaults. If you are black, we refer to you as a porch monkey, spade, jig, tootsoon, and of course, good old niggar. Jewish? Kike, bagel bender, hymie... Italian? Guinea, wop, dago, greaser, guido... and so forth down the line. We do it until such words no longer register any emotional response. Once one becomes freed from their dependence upon the opinions of others, they are then ready to begin their training in earnest. Where the mind goes, the ass follows.

Christian Liberty
03-12-2013, 11:25 AM
NY is a poohole. Absolutely agree.

Christian Liberty
03-12-2013, 11:28 AM
Anyone who would hide behind a badge in order to commit an act of rape doesn't deserve to exist on this earth anymore.

Or anywhere. I'd settle for "Hell."


I hope he receives ZERO special treatment. Throw him in the general population & let them deal with him.

EDIT: He's a cop after all, he'll probably just get probation & return to a department in another county / state.

And free whoever kills him.

I can't talk like this in real life.... thank goodness for RPF...