Trump appears to be unbeatable – On cue, mentally challenged women emerge to claim sexual abuse decades ago

Judge nixes Trump bid to delay suit from woman alleging rape

Rabid left Democrats will stop at nothing to beat Trump. They will use mentally weak people, destroy people, ruin families, claim anything, and the worst of it may be that the media will play along lending legitimacy to wild and reckless claims.

This gal made her claim some time ago. She has already been on all the liberal shows. She is mentally challenged and her story is weak. I anticipate new claims will emerge as we get closer to election day and Democrats sense the election slipping away.

Democrats have weaponized every aspect of government, politics is everything, it is a sick obsession

New York attorney general moves to dissolve National Rifle Association

Attorney General Barr is a good man, watch

Social media censors conservatives attempts to influence 2020 election, government must act

Cotton: Google Suppression of Political News Critical of Democrats Is Election Interference

Democrat candidate for president slips into gibberish in response to a question about China, watch

Satire, but is it really?

Democrat governance – Los Angeles style

Eric Garcetti Announces More Draconian Rules for Los Angeles Residents

Many local Democrats are vying for the nationwide title of “worst elected official.” Los Angeles Democrats are closely behind Portland, Minneapolis, and San Francisco.

Remember that rules apply to law-abiding citizens, not Antifa/BLM rioters and looters, who are free to congregate in large groups, occupy public streets, terrorize local citizens, burn businesses, and generally act like spoiled children.

Democrat governance and resistance to same

McCloskey Detective Refused To Sign Prosecution Docs Twice

While it seems like local and state and federal government bureaucrats are uniformly bad, I know that is not true. There are many good people working in government at all levels, Democrat and Republican, and I am thankful for their work.

There are also many bad actors and they are usually in leadership.

The George Floyd Body Camera Videos: Keys to an Acquittal?

This is an outstanding article that takes a hard and unemotional look at the facts of the George Floyd arrest. I think that the likelihood of conviction of any officer on any of the current charges is low to very low. I think that the failure to procure convictions against the officers will result in new violence. I think the media is largely responsible for the situation because of their biased, emotional, one-sided, and agenda-driven reporting on the incident and the false perception generated in the public by the misreporting. Here is the article repeated in full.

JACK DUNPHY:

I have written elsewhere of myย skepticismย regarding the murder charge against former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd. I have been equally skeptical of the charges against the three other now-former officers, Tou Thao, Thomas Lane, and Alex Kueng, who are accused of aiding and abetting Chauvin. Nothing in the body camera footageย leaked to theย Daily Mailย on Monday has relieved me of that skepticism. I am now even more doubtful that an impartial trier of fact, assuming one can be found, will convict any of the defendants of the charges against them.

It is sometimes my duty to review videos captured at the scene of a killing. Often as I watch them, Iโ€™m struck by how unremarkable things can seem in the very moments before a man pulls a gun or a knife and uses it to kill someone he may have been calmly engaged with only moments earlier. I might watch such a video dozens of times looking for details of the crime, but even so, Iโ€™m never entirely free from the irrational hope that the next time I view it, different choices will be made and the victim will walk away unharmed. At so many different points in these videos, I can imagine the victim or the suspect avoiding the moment that would end one life and forever change the other.

So it is with the George Floyd body camera footage, which depicts what was at first a routine police response to a routine minor crime, a scenario that gave no hint at what was to come. But when we watch these videos now, we of course know George Floyd ends up dead, so we search for the pivotal moments that led to the unfortunate outcome. Whose decisions can we point to and say, but for this, George Floyd would be alive today?

This surely will not sit well with those who have elevated Floyd onto the martyrโ€™s pedestal, but nearly all of these fateful decisions were made by Floyd himself. It was he who passed the counterfeit bill that prompted the police response, it was he who resisted the officersโ€™ efforts to arrest him, and it was he who had used the drugs that may have affected a heart already weakened by disease. As to the fateful decisions made by the officers, even these fall short of anything than be described as a crime, least of all murder.

And yet, here we are, withย whole sections of Minneapolisย and other cities looted and burned, and with rioting even nowย continuing nightlyย in Portland andย sporadically elsewhere, all in the name of George Floyd. So what to make of these videos, copies of which were surreptitiously recorded and leaked to theย Daily Mail?

Will We See Another Kent State Incident?

First, letโ€™s look at the secrecy surrounding the videos themselves. In my National Review Online column linked above, I questioned why the body camera footage had not been made public. โ€œCould it be,โ€ I wrote, โ€œthat it has been withheld because it does not bolster the case against the defendants?โ€ Today, it seems even safer to speculate that this is the case.

Though the world had seen those portions of Floydโ€™s encounter with the police that were captured on nearby security cameras and bystandersโ€™ cellphones, the officersโ€™ body camera videos had remained hidden from public view and under the control of Judge Thomas Cahill, in whose Hennepin County courtroom the case will be heard. But last month Judge Cahill gave members of the media access to view the tapes, thus allowing them to frame their reporting so as to conform with the well-established narrative, which is that Floyd was murdered in cold blood by a racist white cop, aided and abetted by his three equally cold-blooded if less culpable colleagues.

CNNโ€™s July 15 report on the tapes was typical of the genre. โ€œNew police body camera footage,โ€ says theย headlineย on the CNN website, โ€œreveals George Floydโ€™s last words were โ€˜I canโ€™t breathe.โ€™โ€

As indeed they were. But the story, by CNN reporter Omar Jimenez, gives only passing notice to how many times Floyd had made a similar claim, beginning with the officersโ€™ first attempt to put him in the backseat of a police car, at which time he very plainly was breathing. At a muscular 6-4 and 223 pounds, Floyd was not one to be easily overpowered. And Jimenezโ€™s report mentioned nothing about Floydโ€™s histrionics from the moment Officer Lane contacted him as he and two others sat in a parked car. Jimenez seemed troubled that Lane pointed a gun at Floyd, but he failed to mention why the officer did so. โ€œWithin 36 seconds after speaking with a store employee [who had called the police],โ€ writes Jimenez, โ€œthe officers are at the door of the car Floyd was in and, after an initial knock with a flashlight, Lane points a gun at Floyd and yells, โ€˜Put your f**king hands up right now!โ€™ Floyd pleads with the officers while sobbing, at one point putting his head on the steering wheel.โ€

But the body camera footage presents a more complicated picture, doesnโ€™t it? In Laneโ€™s video, we can see that Floyd shows the officer his left hand, but not his right, a glaring danger sign to any police officer. Rare indeed is the cop who will not point his gun at someone under these circumstances. When Floyd, after some persuasion, finally shows his right hand, Lane holsters his weapon and speaks to Floyd tersely but calmly.

Also rare indeed is the police officer who, while patrolling neighborhoods like the one in the Floyd case, hasnโ€™t dealt with a suspect who, like Floyd, turns on what some of us in the trade call the โ€œwoo-woo-woo,โ€ i.e., an inordinate level of emotion when suddenly faced with the prospect of being arrested. โ€œPlease donโ€™t shoot me, man,โ€ says Floyd, โ€œI just lost my mom, man.โ€

Drawing the Line in Portland

Floydโ€™s claim about his mother, like his later denial that he had used drugs, like the mewling that accompanied both, was less than genuine: his motherย had died two years earlier.

And the drama continued as Floyd was walked over to a police car, where he refused to get in the backseat when directed to do so. โ€œI am claustrophobic for real,โ€ he says, though one might question why he found the idea of sitting in the backseat of the police car so much more upsetting than sitting in the front seat of his own.

The officers offered to make allowances for Floydโ€™s claim of claustrophobia, promising to lower the window once he was seated in the car. He still refused, and as is clear in the videos, he strenuously resisted their efforts to put him in the car.

When the bystander video was broadcast on television and shared endlessly on social media, the widespread and continuing assumption was that Chauvin, whose knee was on Floydโ€™s neck, had constricted Floydโ€™s breathing and caused his death. But the report on Floydโ€™s autopsy, as reflected in the section reproduced below,ย refutes this.

George Floyd autopsy
George Floyd autopsy

The autopsy also notes Floydโ€™s hypertensive condition and โ€œsevereโ€ arteriosclerotic heart disease, and the presence of both fentanyl and methamphetamine in his blood. Either of these drugs can cause arrhythmias even in an otherwise healthy person, and when this case is heard in court the defense will surely produce medical experts who will testify that Floydโ€™s heart conditions, drug use, and resistance to being placed in the police car combined to put the fatal strain on his heart.

Few would argue that the force used on Floyd was unreasonable from the start. He was lawfully arrested and resisted the officersโ€™ efforts to place him in a police car. The officers were authorized to use reasonable force to overcome this resistance. The criminal charges in this case stem from the officersโ€™ inability to divine when Floydโ€™s feigned distress, including the earlier claims he could not breathe, became real. Even if they had realized Floyd had suffered a heart attack and begun CPR immediately, there will be a divergence of medical opinions as to whether Floyd could have survived.

So, the question for the judge or jury will be: Did Floyd die because the officers applied unlawful force, or was it because he, with a diseased heart and after consuming dangerous drugs, so vigorously resisted their use ofย lawfulย force? The current state of the evidence provides no clear answer, which translates to reasonable doubt and an acquittal.

I wouldnโ€™t be eager to rebuild any burned businesses in Minneapolis. More trouble lies ahead.

Original

Drain the swamp – Obama Administration political spying

The education system in our country is broken. It has been taken over by leftists.

โ€˜Home-schooling prevents government indoctrination of your kidsโ€™

Doug Santo