Society's Child
According to the victim, who looks like a little girl in the video, but is actually a 32-year-old woman named Shadon, she was assaulted for no reason at all. The lack of an arrest in the incident is evidence of this claim.
According to Shadon, she was arguing with a man who was harassing another woman. When officers saw this, they perceived her as a threat. So, without question or just cause, this 250-pound cop tossed this 90-pound woman around like a rag doll.
"It was harassment, and I asked for the police officer's badge - they wouldn't give me no names, no numbers or nothing - so I left - I never knew this was being recorded," Shadon said in an interview with FOX 5.
As soon as the Twitter user, @MacAndCheeks, posted the video, it quickly went viral sparking outrage toward the DC police department.
Judge Keyla Blank said she based her ruling on inconsistencies in the testimony of the two swimmers, who said they and two teammates were robbed at gunpoint after a late night out.
Blank wrote in her filing that there were questions about a gap between when the swimmers said they left France House and arrived at the athletes' village. The swimmers said they departed France House at about 4 a.m., while a surveillance video showed they checked back in to the athletes village at 6:56 a.m., the judge wrote. Such a trip during early morning hours would take 30 to 40 minutes. She also indicated that images from the France Club indicate a different time of departure than the one the men allege.
She said they did not appear to be physically or psychologically shaken by the alleged crime. "They arrived with their psychological and physical integrity unshaken," she wrote, also noting that the swimmers appeared to be joking with each other and did not appear to be upset. She watched surveillance video of the swimmers arriving at the athletes village.
Comment: To be fair, people respond differently to traumatic experiences. It can be common for people to laugh and look happy after experiencing trauma, as a coping mechanism.

An Afghan security officer patrols during ongoing clashes between government forces and Islamic State (IS) militants in Nangarhar, one of three provinces along Afghanistan's porous border with Pakistan where IS has been active in recent months.
The case underscores the ongoing threat from militants in Afghanistan, where IS fighters appear to have been building a presence for more than two years as they compete with the Taliban to spearhead antigovernment and anti-Western efforts. IS devotees have claimed responsibility for a number of recent deadly attacks against Afghan civilians and security forces.
The would-be bomber reportedly remains in custody, and the details of the case were provided to RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan by Afghan authorities. They say her husband, Qari Zia, is a former Taliban commander from Jowzjan Province who crossed over to IS and is now based in the extremists' stronghold of Nangarhar, in eastern Afghanistan.
"Qari Zia...encouraged his wife to carry out a suicide attack," Rahmatullah Turkistani, the police commander of Jowzjan Province, said. "He wanted his wife to come to Nangarhar to receive training in preparation for a suicide attack."
Turkistani said the woman was traveling to Nangarhar when she surrendered to security forces in Jowzjan's provincial capital, Sheberghan. She is being held in a women's shelter in the city while police investigate her claims. The police commander said Zia had repeatedly telephoned his wife to urge her to go to Nangarhar's provincial capital, Jalalabad, where authorities believe he is hiding.
According to poll results from Public Policy Polling released Tuesday, three out of five Texans who support Donald Trump said they would support seceding from America if Hillary Clinton becomes president.
Data from the left-leaning polling firm shows that Trump leads Clinton by a margin of 50 percent to 44 percent in Texas. This is far from the landslide win for Mitt Romney in the 2012 election. Four years ago, Romney beat President Barack Obama 57.2 percent to 41.4 percent.
According to the polling results from PPP, only one out of four Texans support seceding from America generally. But when faced with the possibility of a President Hillary Clinton, a majority of Texans said they'd rather leave.
Police have also found materials linked to Islamic State (IS, former ISIS/ISIL) as the search of the suspect's apartment continues, German media report. According to news agency DPA, the suspect had a Salafist background and was under police supervision.
The suspect reportedly planned to set off an improvised explosive device filled with nails at a festival in Eisenhuttenstadt that was due to take place on August 26-28.
LaSalle was copwatching outside the Patterson Houses, a public housing complex in The Bronx managed by the New York City Housing Authority on the night of August 5. Copwatching is a practice by which activists follow police around with cameras in order to document their interactions with communities.
The events of the night of the fifth and the sixth were highlighted by LaSalle at a press conference outside the NYPD's main headquarters Tuesday morning, and were discussed in further detail with RT.
The unemployment rate remained at 4.9 percent in the three months to June, according to official data released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) on Wednesday.
Average earnings grew 2.4 percent compared with a year earlier, with total pay excluding bonuses rising 2.3 percent, the ONS reports.
The latest data also shows that the claimant count - which measures the number of people claiming for unemployment-related benefits - fell by 8,600 against a previously projected 9,500 increase. Overall, 172,000 people joined the workforce during the period covered.
The unemployment data followed Tuesday's inflation rate update which revealed consumer prices index (CPI) growth was a higher-than-expected 0.6 percent in July.
Comment: Another catastrophic Brexit prediction that has so far failed to materialize...
The letter was written by Bishop Lawrence M Wooten, president of the Ecumenical Leadership Council of St Louis, a group of black clergy members serving communities near the suburb of Ferguson where the BLM movement emerged following racial rebellion against police violence.
Citing Philando Castile as the "123rd unarmed black male fatally shot this year," Bishop Wooten started by acknowledging the vital role BLM plays in addressing police brutality, but then attacked the movement's solidarity for Palestinians in its call to end US aid to Israel.
"Their argument is that Israel is an apartheid state perpetrating genocide against the Palestinians," the letter reads, going on to reject, "without hesitation any notion or assertion that Israel operates as an apartheid country."
Comment: Unbelievable! Apparently Jewish colonies and Jewish-only roads aren't apartheid... Apartheid South Africa could have used more idiots like this back in the day.
In a speech delivered not far from Milwaukee neighborhoods rocked by anti-police riots, Mr. Trump laid the blame for urban despair and conflict between police and minorities at the feet of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
"I am running to offer you a much better future," Mr. Trump said in a speech in West Bend, Wisconsin. "Crime and violence is an attack on the poor and it will never be accepted in a Trump administration."
He said the policies holding back minority neighborhoods were part of the "rigged system" led by Mrs. Clinton, who he said pandered to black voters but didn't really care about their suffering.
Jose Ignacio Roid, 30 of Roseville, was arrested on five counts of surreptitious recording. Investigators say nearly 20 videos were found on Roid's phone of the sister-in-law from a hidden camera in her bathroom.
Roid's wife found a receipt for a pen camera dated around the time her sister moved into a suite attached to their main house two months ago. When she confronted him about the camera, investigators say he said it was for his work as a CHP officer.
His wife later found an app on his phone that was linked to the camera with multiple videos of a naked woman. Thinking it was pornography like they had watched together in the past, she watched and instead found it was her sister.
Investigators do not believe the sister-in-law knew about the recordings or was part of an illicit relationship with Roid.
In all, 19 videos from five separate days between July 17 and Aug. 8 were found on the phone. All featured a nude woman in the bathroom believed to be the sister-in-law.
CBS13 is not identifying the victim of this case by name.
The CHP issued a statement saying it is cooperating with the investigation and that Roid has been placed on administrative leave.














Comment: Further reading: