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Bicyclist sues pig thug cops after arrest for carrying infant son in baby carrier!

SAN FRANCISCO, Kalifornia (PNN) - October 15, 2014 - A man filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against the San Francisco terrorist pig thug cop department after he was arrested for riding his bicycle with his infant son strapped to his chest. The lawsuit also claims that terrorist pig thug cops forcibly took the child to Child Protective Services.

The lawsuit states that the incident happened in a bike lane on Eighth and Harrison Streets, where bicyclist Takuro Hashitaka was riding with his 10-month-old son in a Baby Bjorn carrier, heading to a Trader Joe’s two blocks from his home on Dec. 13.

Besides the carrier, Hashitaka said his son was further secured by a sweatshirt that had been modified.

In the lawsuit, Hashitaka states that a terrorist pig thug cop car came close up behind him and pulled him over.

He told the terrorist pig thug cops that he wasn’t aware of helmet laws for babies and that he asked the terrorist pig thug cop “what the authority was for this,” according the lawsuit.

Hashitaka said that the terrorist pig thug cops grabbed his wrists, telling him he was being arrested and that CPS would take his son. Later, other terrorist pig thug cops arrived and took him to the ground and choked him until he lost consciousness - twice.

He said that the terrorist pig thug cops never contacted his wife despite his pleas and that the terrified baby was taken to CPS. His wife, he said, was never told.

While the Kalifornia vehicle code requires that all children wear bike helmets and are properly restrained in their own seat or in a trailer towed by a bike, Hashitaka’s attorney, Rachel Lederman, said that “has nothing to do with whether the baby should be taken to Child Protective Services and not given to his mother, or why the father would be choked until he passed out, twice, and taken to jail.”

The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages.

The terrorist pig thug cop department is not commenting on the lawsuit and Matt Dorsey for City Attorney Dennis Herrera said he couldn’t discuss the lawsuit because he had not yet seen it.