Absolutely ignorant and tyrannical @fortworthpd. How did these fools graduate from the academy? Were they out sick the day you taught Constitutional law?
🚨FORT WORTH, TEXAS🚨Police told street preachers at the FW all-ages Pride event they could be cited if someone was offended by their speech. Asked if calling a transgender woman “sir” was citable, an officer replied, “It’s a gray area.”
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@Carlos__Turcios@DallasExpress
This guy was so unhinged that he attacked one of his own. The video is out there. Former Sunrise police sergeant Christopher Pullease was caught on bodycam grabbing a female officer by the neck during a 2021 arrest after she tried to pull him away from a suspect. He faced felony battery and evidence tampering charges but has now avoided a criminal trial by entering a veterans court diversion program. If he completes it, the charges will be dismissed.
Justice or special treatment? Drop your thoughts below 👇 and click the link for the full story.
#police #lawenforcement
Former Cedar Hill officer Donald Mercer was sentenced to 300 days in jail after turning off his body camera during a 2024 traffic stop. He kissed a DWI arrestee, hid her marijuana, drove her to a dark parking lot, and solicited oral sex. Jurors also heard about similar misconduct with other women.
Prosecutors called it an “egregious abuse of power.”
Should officers who disable body cams face automatic termination? Drop your thoughts below 👇 and click the link for the full story.
To some, violence is the only or primary way to solve problems. This mentality is not compatible with a civilized society. Knowing the entire incident is recorded didn't deter this one from lying about it. He couldn't help himself.
NEW: Former 21’ Kentucky State Trooper of the Year pleads guilty to excessive force and perjury after beating and tasing incidents
KSP Trooper James Cameron Wright pleaded guilty in federal court on June 17, 2026, to civil rights violations involving excessive force and perjury.
Wright admitted to a pattern of misconduct between 2019 and 2024, including beating a man in Bullitt County in 2020 and then lying about it under oath, as well as repeatedly tasing and pepper-spraying an unarmed man during a 2024 traffic stop in Hardin County.
Under the plea agreement, Wright faces up to 50 months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release and restitution to his victims.
He remains out on bond and is scheduled to be sentenced on October 28, 2026.
Tampa Police Officer Fired After Arrest for Allegedly Paying 16-Year-Old for Explicit Photos
A Tampa police officer has been fired and arrested in a disturbing case involving a minor he met on a dating app. Jonathan Darling, 31, who joined the Tampa Police Department in 2019, was taken into custody at his home Monday afternoon. He faces charges of unlawful sexual activity with a minor, use of a two-way communications device, and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
Drop your thoughts in the comments below 👇 and click the link for the full FOX 13 report.
How does this even happen? A former San Antonio police officer fired after being accused of feeding a homeless man a sandwich filled with dog feces has been appointed chief of police in a small South Texas town.
Matthew Luckhurst was terminated from SAPD in 2020 following multiple incidents involving human waste. He has now been named chief in Benavides, a town of about 1,100 people.
How does someone with this record become a police chief? Drop your thoughts below and click the link for the full story.
A Broken Arrow police officer has been arrested and immediately placed on administrative leave following a serious domestic incident involving her former fiancée.
According to the arrest report, the victim told investigators that an argument between the two escalated into a physical altercation. She alleged that **Officer Tamara Smith** pushed her to the ground, held her down, and grabbed her by the throat. The victim reportedly had visible red marks on her neck and bruising on her wrist when she came forward.
Police determined Smith was the primary aggressor. She now faces a charge of **domestic assault and battery by strangulation**. Smith has been released on bond while both a criminal case and an internal investigation move forward.
What do you make of it? Should officers facing these kinds of allegations be immediately removed from duty, or is administrative leave the right first step? Drop your take in the comments below 👇 and click the link for the latest from NewsOn6 as more information comes out.
@horsyguy This is an unfortunate outcome. Basically, no accountability. He should have been put in front of a jury of his peers and sent to prison if found guilty.
The figures most frequently referenced in advocacy materials, fact sheets, and media are that approximately 40% of police officer families experience domestic violence (often framed as 2–4 times higher than the general population). This originates primarily from two early 1990s self-report studies:
Johnson (1991): Roughly 40% of officers self-reported behaving "violently" toward a spouse or children in the prior six months.
Neidig et al. (1992): Around 40% of officers reported physical aggression (any acts) in marital conflicts in the prior year; about 8% reported severe aggression. Spouse reports and bidirectional violence were also noted.
The profession has a problem.
@jdlyonsKY There were other ways to solve this. They had the license plate. They probably knew what the thief looked like. They could have obtained a warrant and picked that person up later. Unless the driver was posing an imminent threat with a firearm, stand down.
Auburn, WA, officer arrested May 15 in an online child sex abuse sting for immoral communication with a minor was fired effective May 28. Pierce County Sheriff's ICAC unit made contact on May 13 and arrested the suspect. Police Chief called it "deeply troubling." Details:
https://t.co/AOEueDJyqG
Pasadena, CA, officer Roy Alatorre was fired after a video showed him and a colleague engaging in egotistical horseplay in a police garage. The other officer, seated in a patrol vehicle, drew his gun, which accidentally discharged, shooting Alatorre in the shoulder (he recovered). The mayor called it “juvenile, unacceptable.” Case under criminal review. Details: https://t.co/1ZqYVFHldu
Shelby, NC officer fired after viral doorbell cam video showed him throwing Cherie Moore to the ground, straddling her & punching her repeatedly during an arrest on May 29. A second officer intervened. Moore (charged w/ breaking & entering, resisting, assault on an officer) said she had no warrant & needed mental health help. Chief called it “disturbing”. Details: https://t.co/rwvy9GXivY
The cop doesn't know basic constitutional law. At least seven federal circuit courts of appeals (1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 10th, and 11th) have explicitly recognized a First Amendment right to record police officers carrying out their duties in public places. He is a liability now!
🚨BREAKING: A U.S. citizen in, Vancouver, WA, was pulled over by FIVE police cars for legally observing and documenting ICE agents… then had to explain the Constitution to the officers detaining him…
And it was all caught on video.
In the video, an ICE agent didn’t like being watched, called local police…
Then suddenly, the U.S. citizen, exercising his constitutional rights, was surrounded by FIVE cop cars.
And most ridiculous part?
The officers who claimed “reasonable suspicion” for detaining the U.S. citizen, could not even answer this simple question…
Is it legal to observe and record law enforcement?
After refusing to answer, and arguing about the First Amendment for several minutes, the officer finally admitted…
Yes. It is legal to observe and record law enforcement.
So, if it’s a legally protected activity… then why was this U.S. citizen detained?
Federal courts, across the country, have repeatedly recognized that the First Amendment protects the right to record and observe government officials… including law enforcement performing their duties in public… as long as you aren’t interfering with them.
That means, local police, and ICE agents, don’t get to decide when that right applies… They don’t get to ignore the Constitution because they’re uncomfortable with public oversight.
But this isn’t the only incident.
Across America, we’re watching local law enforcement work alongside ICE, while ordinary citizens, journalists, and legal observers are being questioned, detained, and intimidated for exercising their constitutional rights.
And the fact that a U.S. citizen had to educate the officers, who were detaining HIM, about the Constitution… should outrage every single person.
Because if the people enforcing the law don’t understand the constitutional rights they’re sworn to protect…
That puts every American in danger.