Society's Child
The incident took place on Friday, after the suspect had fled a Walmart he is accused of stealing from and hid behind a dumpster across the street.
Pete Ortega, the witness who recorded the incident, believes the officers used excessive force when he saw two officers pin the senior citizen down on the ground and a third rush over and step on his face before tasing him.

Easyjet entrepreneur Stelios Haji-Ioannou hopes the store (mock up teacher) will become the UK's leading cashless supermarket.
And, true to its founder's philosophy of offering pared-back, no-frills service, eventually it won't even take cash.
EasyJet entrepreneur Stelios Haji-Ioannou has unveiled details for his first easyFoodstore budget supermarket - his latest venture after bargain easyJet flights and windowless rooms at the easyHotel.
He hopes it will eventually become the UK's first cashless supermarket, suggesting it is cheaper to process card payments than to cash up every day and pay a security firm to bank it.
But the company admits that, in an effort to compete with discount chains such as Aldi and Lidl, staff wages will also be low-cost.

Jailed: Brittany Ruck (above) is being held in jail after pulling her 6-year-old daughter's hair so hard that the young girl had her scalp separate from her skull and blood pool in her eyes.
- Brittany Ruck, 25, allegedly puller her 6-year-old daughter's hair so hard that the scalp separated from the skull and blood pooled in the girl's eyes
- The incident happened after Ruck became angry her daughter could not count to 12 and pulled her out of a chair by her hair
- The mother of three from Conway, Pennsylvania, has been charged with assault and endangering the welfare of a child and being held in jail
- All three children are currently with other family members
Brittany Ruck, 25, of Conway, Pennsylvania, was so angry with her 6-year-old daughter's inability to count to 12 that she lifted the little girl out of a chair by her hair.
The child was pulled so hard that 'the girl's scalp was separated from her skull and blood pooled around the girl's eyes.'
Ruck reportedly admitted to pulling the young girl's hair on multiple occasions when questioned by authorities.
Doctors at Children's Hospital alerted police when the girl was brought in suffering from traction on August 31, a few days after the incident.
This is when the child revealed what happened, and said her mother had pulled her hair to throw her in a corner the day after she was pulled from the chair.
'The little girl told us she could only count to 10 because she had 10 fingers, but she couldn't count any higher. That's when the mother grabbed her by her hair,' Conway police Officer Mike Priolo told WPXI.
'It's just sad because she didn't do anything wrong and she had to bear the brunt of pain.'
The raid took place at the "Neighborhood Angel" yard sale in Meridian, Idaho, which annually sells donated items to benefit a young girl suffering from cancer. When a 39-year-old man arrived on a motorcycle to browse the tables on September 22, 2014, the event organizer described him as an "Every day kind of a guy, [an] all-American boy."
Minutes later, in front of numerous customers and children, armored police officers descended upon the community event, throwing a man to the ground, along with an innocent woman who happened to be standing next to him.
"All of a sudden the SWAT team came in and arrested him and they told me he was a really bad guy," said Flo Martinez to WTVB. "I'm a single mom of four kids and it scared the heck out of us."
A BBC report said that they had been abducted and taken to Thailand to be sold as 'slaves'.
The men were promised well-paid jobs, before being drugged, bound and kidnapped, the report said.
The government in Thailand say they are trying to fight the slave trade, but have been accused of "dragging their heels" on the issue.

In this Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2014 file photo released by the US Air Force, a US Navy F-18E Super Hornet fighter jet receives fuel from a KC-135 Stratotanker over northern Iraq after conducting airstrikes in Syria as part of US-led coalition airstrikes on the Islamic State group and other targets in Syria.
According to the observatory, the airstrikes targeting oil fields near the Kabiba village killed three people, one under the age of 18 in the far north east Hasakah province, while seven were killed by strikes targeting a gas station in a city in the eastern part of Syria, Der-Ezzor.
The Islamic State is a Sunni jihadi group that has been fighting the Syrian government since 2012. In June 2014, it launched an offensive in Iraq, seizing vast areas in both countries and announcing the establishment of an Islamic caliphate on the territories under its control.
In September US President Barack Obama announced his decision to form an international anti-IS coalition. Washington extended its airstrikes against the militants into Syria, while continuing airstrikes against the group's targets in Iraq. Obama said the United States would arm and equip Kurds, Iraqis and Syria's moderate opposition in an effort to eradicate the IS.
Comment: What is becoming ever more evident is that U.S. has no intention of stopping ISIS. By bombing empty buildings, oil refineries, civilians, grain silos and doing nothing to stop the ISIS attack on Kobane they are revealing their goals:
U.S. destroying Syrian infrastructure while ISIS slaughters Kurds in Kobani
what should be obvious based on the history of U.S. interventions - that the real objective of U.S. intervention in Iraq and Syria is the reintroduction of direct U.S. military power in the region in order to secure continue control over the oil and natural gas resources of the region, undermine Iran, block the Russian Federation, and break-up cooperative economic and trade agreements between counties in Central Asia and China.
On a smooth, wide, well-travelled stretch of Irving Park Road, running between two cemeteries - no homes, no stores, no parking - the city of Chicago is trying to balance its budget. Each flash means a photo; each photo, a violation. Each violation: a hundred bucks, from red-light and speed cameras. CBS 2 has learned the speed cameras caught far fewer speeders than expected.
According to the Mayor's 2015 Budget Overview, there have been "lower than expected violation rates." How much lower? Fifty million dollars lower. Emanuel's administration had figured on $90 million in fines to help balance this year's budget, but they can only count on $40 million. That's a $50 million shortfall, putting pressure on the next spending plan.
The Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) began July 26 and was the seventh outbreak in this region since the discovery of the virus in 1976. The first patient was a pregnant woman from Ikanamongo Village who likely contracted the virus when she butchered a bush animal. She died Aug. 11. About 70 more people also became ill and more than 40 died by October, but the outbreak seems to have been tapering off since.
In contrast, the Ebola outbreak in West Africa has affected at least 8,400 people and killed more than 4,000 people since it began in Guinea in early 2014 and spread to the neighboring countries of Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Comment: Being well prepared to mount a quick and effective response was one reason the outbreaks were initially contained. Unfortunately most hospitals are NOT prepared, so the most important thing for people to understand is that it is imperative to take responsibility for one's own health and well-being. BigPharma and the government are not likely to contain this plague.
Here are suggestions to start implementing now:

Promotional blurb on the website advertising the educational toys reads: 'Ebola has become the T. Rex of microbes. Share the love!'
Giant Microbes advertises three Ebola-themed toys, marketing them as "a uniquely contagious gift" that can help you learn "all about his fearsome front-page disease."
The Ebola virus has so far killed 4,555 people, with over 9,000 confirmed cases across seven different countries.
"Since its discovery in 1976, Ebola has become the T. Rex of microbes. Share the love!" reads the promotional blurb on the website.
Laura Sullivan, vice president of marketing at the company, said to the Toronto Star they had completely sold out worldwide.
"We get it in and sell out in a few days," she claimed, before reassuring potential customers the company were making more as "fast as we can" to keep up with demand.
The photo was posted by John Griffin, a senior producer at CNN, and shows three New Day anchors - Chris Cuomo, Michaela Pereira, and Alisyn Camerota - pretending to be scared while two men in protective gear stand over them. The post has since been removed.
Social media users, particularly on Twitter, did not waste time reacting to the questionable post. For example, Addictinginfo.org slammed CNN for tweeting an image mocking the Ebola crisis.











Comment: The city was so quick to jump at the chance for revenue that they neglected to look at studies which have shown that the cameras create accidents and they are not always reliable:
UK: Study Finds That Speed Cameras CREATE Accidents
Speed camera madness - man gets ticket for going 0 MPH