🚨 North Carolina deputy pepper-sprays truck driver directly in the eyes at close range just for asking if he could enter a courtroom.
39-year-old Don D. Long II went to the Northampton County Courthouse in Jackson and asked a simple question: whether he was allowed inside the courtroom. According to his attorneys, Long was not running, threatening anyone, or causing any disturbance.
That’s when Deputy Gregory Colson sprayed him directly in the face with pepper spray at close range. Long’s legal team says the spray caused permanent eye damage and ongoing vision problems. They’ve now released video of the incident and sent notice that they plan to sue the deputy, the sheriff, and county officials for excessive force.
A man went to a courthouse to handle legal matters and walked out with lasting eye damage after asking one question. Video of the encounter is now public.
How does a simple request to enter a courtroom justify being pepper-sprayed in the face at close range? And what kind of training or oversight allows this kind of force to be used so quickly on someone who wasn’t being aggressive?
Should Deputy Gregory Colson be fired if the video confirms Long was only asking a question, or should officials wait for the full investigation?
The caption compresses the story in ways that actually make it smaller than it is.
Isaac Wright Jr. was convicted in 1991 as a drug kingpin in New Jersey, the first person ever charged under the state’s new kingpin law. He was sentenced to life in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, orchestrated by a corrupt prosecutor named Nicholas Bissell who fabricated evidence, falsified police reports, and made secret deals with witnesses to lie under oath.
He didn’t just study law. While serving his sentence, he became a prison paralegal and helped overturn the wrongful convictions of at least twenty other inmates before he got to his own case. Twenty people. While still locked up himself.
The moment that broke everything open came during his own appeal hearing. Wright cross-examined a veteran police detective named James Dugan on the stand. Under Wright’s questioning, Dugan confessed to systematic police misconduct and cover-up. That confession unravelled the entire case and implicated Bissell directly.
What happened next is almost impossible to believe. Bissell was convicted on 30 counts including obstruction of justice, perjury, and abuse of power. He was placed under house arrest pending sentencing. Two days before facing the judge, he cut his ankle monitor and fled. Federal authorities pursued him across state lines. When police broke down the door of a Nevada hotel room, Bissell took his own life.
Wright’s trial judge, Michael Imbriani, who had helped conceal the secret deals through illegal sentencing, was separately removed from the bench and imprisoned on theft charges.
Wright was released, went to college, graduated law school in 2007, passed the bar in 2008, and now practices law in the same courtroom where he was sentenced to life.
The prosecutor fled the country rather than face him. The judge went to prison. Wright is still in the courtroom
@LauraUltraMaga@ivar_great@QueenShibaQueen You don't have any facts you lice ridden bitch! Why hasn't any footage been released? Likely it proves this A student football and track team captain was defending himself from biggerkkkracker kidswho think like you do!
Btw... where are those Epstein files?
@Kuremma18@Jaded995@Dexerto You're a dirty anglo wannabe and white supremacist will treat you like Myron Gaines and Candice owns when they finish slutting you out bitch!!