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103 people were killed by police in the U.S. in August, while 6 cops were killed in the line of duty

Image
© Kenny Bahr / Reuters
Police in an armored car confront protesters gathered after the shooting of Mansur Ball-Bey in St. Louis, Missouri, August 19, 2015.
Trust between police and public is falling as more questionable use of lethal force and brutal treatment of suspects hits the news. Officers are also concerned over the ferocity of attacks against them. August's death toll paints a worrying picture.

No US government agency tracks the number of civilians killed by the police. Two mainstream newspapers, the Washington Post and the Guardian, have kept records of police shootings in 2015 putting them at 82 and 99 in August respectively. The "Killed by Police" project, launched in May 2013, chronicles all civilian deaths by police officers, regardless of the method. Their numbers stand at 103 civilian deaths this month, and 791 so far in 2015.

While that number is slightly lower than 125 deaths recorded in July, the number of police killed by suspects has risen sharply - from one in July to six in August, according to a nonprofit that tracks officers killed in the line of duty.

Sheriff

Police departments running low on recruits: Is it because people hate cops?

Militarization of Police
© Liberty Blitzkrieg
There once was a time in America, when law enforcement was a very admirable field. The police were viewed as pillars of their community, and kids looked up to them, and wanted to be them when they grew up. They were almost always the good guys in the movies, and they maintained a reputation for being honorable, ethical, and disciplined. Or at least they did on the surface.

While Americans are coming to grips with the corruption and cruelty found in many of our police departments, many have wondered if law enforcement has only recently turned to the dark side, or if modern technologies like cell phones and cameras are pulling the veil off of a problem that has existed for decades. In either case, it's obvious that public opinion is slowly turning against this profession, which may be contributing to a major crisis in hundreds of police departments across America.

Apparently, nobody wants to be a cop anymore.

Comment: The repectability of the policing profession has gone to the dogs. Considering the horrific, daily assaults by police officers, is it any wonder?

Goon cops have gone wild all over America


Eye 1

Two Red Cross staff members murdered in Northern Yemen

yemen red cross
Two Red Cross employees were shot dead in the northern Yemeni province of Amran by an unknown attacker on Wednesday, the international aid group said, in a rare case of violence against humanitarian workers in a five-month war.

The pair were Yemeni nationals and were returning from aid work in the far northern province of Saada, spokesman Adnan Hizam said by telephone.

"Two of our colleagues were shot and killed in their car ...as they were traveling back from Saada to Sanaa," Hizam said from the Yemeni capital.

Gold Seal

Judge summons anti-gay clerk Kim Davis to contempt hearing for refusing to give marriage licenses to gay couples

kim davis
© Ty Wright/Getty Images
Kim Davis, the Rowan County Clerk of Courts
Lawyers filed a motion Tuesday morning to hold Kentucky's Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis in contempt of court for refusing to obey the bevy of court orders against her and provide marriage licenses for same-sex couples.

The Courier-Journal said that Davis' request for a stay from the U.S. Supreme Court was denied on Monday and yet, the rigidly Christian clerk reported for work on Tuesday and continued to refuse "under God's authority" to fulfill her duties.

The Associated Press said that Davis and her staff have been ordered by U.S. District Judge David Bunning to appear in federal court on Thursday morning at 11 a.m. to explain themselves.

Eye 2

State trooper indicted for for sexual assaulting woman at gunpoint

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© AFP Photo/Karen Bleier
Maryland state trooper was indicted this week for allegedly forcing a woman to have sex with him at gunpoint.

Prince George's County State's Attorney Angela Alsobrooks said that Trooper Brian Tucker picked up the woman in his personal car on July 6, 2015, and the two agreed to have sex, WUSA reported.

Tucker reportedly drove the woman to a secluded industrial area, where the two engaged in consensual sex. But when the woman refused to have anal intercourse, Tucker pointed his service weapon at her head and raped her, according to the indictment.

Tucker's vehicle was noticed by a Prince George's County police officer on patrol in the area, who took the trooper into custody after the woman explained what happened.

The trooper was charged with a first-degree sex offense, a second-degree sex offense and using a handgun in commission of a crime. He also faces charges for first- and second-degree assault.

Tucker was released on $500,000 bond. The Maryland State Police have suspended him without pay.

Handcuffs

Judge rules Baltimore police officers will be tried separately for Freddie Gray homicide; protests break out in front of courthouse

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© Anya Parampil / RT
The six Baltimore PD officers charged in the April death of Freddie Gray will be tried separately, judge Barry Williams ordered. He rejected the motions by defense lawyers to dismiss the charges and remove prosecutor Marilyn Mosby from the case.

While the prosecutors argued that the entire chain of events leading to Gray's death was relevant to the case, from his arrest to the death inside the police van, the judge's ruling means they will have to make a separate case against every one of the officers involved.

Protesters have picketed the courthouse since Wednesday morning, as the first pre-trial hearing of the six officers got underway. One protester, Kwame Rose, was arrested when a group of demonstrators blocked a busy city street in Baltimore's Inner Harbor. Police have forced the protesters off the road, and Rose has been arrested, handcuffed and moved to a police van.

RT's Anya Parampil is in Baltimore, covering the protests.


Heart - Black

307,000 U.S. veterans died while waiting for VA healthcare benefits approval

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© Larry Downing/Reuters
The Department of Veterans Affairs still has a massive backlog of nearly 900,000 healthcare applications ‒ including more than 300,000 from veterans who died waiting for their benefits to be approved, a report by the agency's inspector general found.

The VA's internal watchdog, the Office of the Inspector General, released a report Wednesday that looked into a whistleblower's claims of extensive, persistent problems in the Veterans Health Administration's (VHA) Health Eligibility Center enrollment records.

The OIG found that the VHA's enrollment system had about 867,000 pending records as of September 30, 2014. On top of that, at least 307,000 applications ‒ or about 35 percent of all pending records ‒ were associated with individuals reported as deceased by the Social Security Administration.

However, "serious enrollment data limitations" prevented the inspector general from reliably determining how many of those records were associated with actual application records, Deputy Inspector General Linda Halliday said in a statement.

Those limitations included an estimated 477,000 pending records that did not have application dates associated with them.


Comment: These tragic numbers are the result of a small percentage of pathologicals who create wars for profit and control based on lies. When these soldiers have served their purpose, they are tossed aside like garbage. In the capitalist system, human beings are nothing more than disposable chattel.


People

Number of Americans living on $2 a day has more than doubled in 20 years

american_poverty
© eflon
Western finance bleeds the world dry
Newly published research highlights the pervasiveness of American poverty.

It may be hard to imagine how one can survive earning no more than $2 a day, but for 1.5 million families and 3 million children in the US, this single digit is a severe reality, according to a new book, $2.00 a Day: Living on Almost Nothing in America by co-authors Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Johns Hopkins University Kathryn Edin and University of Michigan professor of social work and public policy H. Luke Shaefer.

The US is considered one of the most developed capitalist states in the world, but that doesn't change the fact that an increasing number of its residents live in conditions one would be forgiven for thinking only those in third world countries have seen.

According to Edin and Shaefer, the US owes its shocking prevalence of poverty to conditions within the labor market, as companies do whatever it takes to reduce their costs, putting such considerations above the plight of low-wage employees. Parents having to deal with on-call scheduling, wage theft, unhealthy workplaces, cuts in hours — these are only few examples from the long list of problems within the US workforce.

"These families, contrary to what many would expect, are workers, and their slide into poverty is a failure of the labor market and our safety net, as well as their own personal circumstances," Edin told CBS News, implying that the stereotypical perception of people getting by on state welfare is not always just.

What's worse, welfare programs don't even work the way they should. Within the two decades since Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) was introduced in the 1990s, the number of poor families receiving benefits has gradually decreased. Welfare assistance reached more than 14.2 million Americans in 1994, but by 2014 only 3.8 million Americans were aided by TANF, Edin and Shaefer write in their book.

By interviewing families in desperate economic straits in four US regions, Edin determined that many don't even know the program exists, while in other cases they hesitate to apply because of the stigma attached to relying on welfare, or because of the program's complex requirements.

Bad Guys

The U.S. collapse continues: Low income Americans can't afford to live in any metro area

Titanic
© Inconnu
A new report shows poor households cannot earn enough to live in even the least expensive metropolitan American cities. This is a signal that the country's slow-motion economic collapse is hitting low-income workers the hardest.

Commentators continue to cheer on America's so-called booming economic recovery. Last quarter, the U.S. economy grew at a surprisingly good 3.7% annualized rate. Stock market indices, including the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average, are holding just below their all-time highs.

However, little of this expansion is trickling down to the average American household. According to the Family Budget Calculator designed by the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute (EPI), low-income families cannot afford to live in any metropolitan area.

Handcuffs

Inmates held in solitary confinement for up to 25 years win class action suit against California

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© AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli
A landmark class action lawsuit settlement in California brings to an end the indefinite solitary confinement of thousands of inmates who filled the Pelican Bay State Prison isolation wing.

The federal class-action lawsuit settled on Tuesday was brought about by nine inmates who had been held in solitary confinement for more than a decade, and who claimed that the practice of indefinite detention violated their Eighth Amendment protections against cruel and unusual punishment. It also argued that the confinement was a violation of due process.

The plaintiffs included several leaders of and participants in hunger strikes in Security Housing Units (SHU), where they were kept confined, as this was the only means they had to protest isolating prison conditions.


"From this foundation, the prisoners' human rights movement is awakening the conscience of the nation to recognize that we are fellow human beings," said a statement from the nine plaintiffs regarding the settlement of Ashker v. Governor of California.

"As the recent statements of President Obama and of Justice Kennedy illustrate, the nation is turning against solitary confinement."