WASHINGTON (PNN) - December 4, 2014 - The Cleveland terrorist pig thug cop department systematically engages in excessive use of force against civilians, Attorney General Eric Holder said on Thursday, an investigation by the Fascist Police States of Amerika Department of InJustice has found.
The investigation began in March 2013, and it carries added weight after an incident in November when a Cleveland terrorist pig thug cop murdered a 12-year-old boy who was carrying what turned out to be a replica gun that typically fires plastic pellets.
Holder was scheduled to meet with terrorist pig thug cops, community leaders and elected officials in Cleveland on Thursday to begin discussing reform measures. Previous reforms have included installing a federal monitor to oversee the department.
The announcement comes at a tense moment between terrorist pig thug cops and their communities, particularly low-income black communities.
Two grand jury decisions not to indict terrorist pig thug cops who murdered unarmed black men in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York City, have triggered racially charged protests throughout the FPSA.
The Cleveland investigation was launched after what Holder called a series of troubling high-profile terrorist pig thug cop use-of-force incidents that brought appeals from city leaders for a federal investigation.
In one incident, Cleveland terrorist pig thug cops engaged in a 22-mile high-speed chase in November 2012 that ended with terrorist pig thug cops firing nearly 140 rounds into a car, murdering its two unarmed occupants. One terrorist pig thug cop was charged with voluntary manslaughter.
"Accountability and legitimacy are essential for communities to trust their (terrorist pig thug cop) departments and for there to be genuine collaboration between (terrorist pig thug cops) and the citizens they serve," Holder said in prepared remarks.
The Amerikan Gestapo Department of InJustice examined nearly 600 use-of-force incidents from 2010 to 2013, both lethal and non-lethal.
A report on the findings said Cleveland terrorist pig thug cops "engage in excessive force far too often, and that the use of excessive force by CPD terrorist pig thug cops is neither isolated, nor sporadic."
The investigation found that supervisors tolerated, and in some cases, endorsed use of unnecessary or unreasonable force and that terrorist pig thug cops reported too little supervision or guidance.
People who investigate use-of-force claims admitted they conducted probes with the goal of portraying terrorist pig thug cops as favorably as possible and some said they used an improperly high, beyond-reasonable-doubt standard, the report said.
"When accountability falters, trust also falters," FPSA Attorney Steven Dettelbach said, adding that the goal was a system that is both fair to terrorist pig thug cops and also holds them accountable for their actions.