This umpire gave this kid and his team two warnings for throwing the bat at the catcher.
He told them if it happened again they were going to get ejected from the game.
Well….it happened again.
The batter hit the ball back to the pitcher and the pitcher overthrew first base. But, the umpire called a dead ball and called the batter out and ejected him from the game.
The coach came out to argue and said the batter didn’t throw the bat, that it was a regular follow through on the back swing. He told the umpire they had it on film. The umpire said he had it on film too.
Then the third base coach came down to argue and the umpire told the coach he was wrong and that he had it on video.
You can hear the parents screaming at him.
Some people said that was a terrible call and he let go legally on the follow through. You can also hear them tell the umpire that he had it out for that kid. 🤯
But a lot of people sided with the ump and said he handled it well and with that many warnings that it was a fantastic call. 💯
The umpire gave the same kid two prior warnings. Even if it wasn’t intentional, there has to be consequences after a third time. He could seriously injure the catcher. This will help the batter in the future hopefully.
What do you think? Was this the right or wrong call?
Bully officer that does not know the law costs his department 41,000 dollars.
The incident took place outside the Pueblo Police Department in Colorado, where an independent journalist known as O'Connel was filming and taking photos from a public sidewalk.
As we all know this a protected right that we all have. This journalist is exercising those very rights.
Officer Romero notices O'Connel recording police vehicles and the building. He approaches and demands to know who O'Connel is and what he's doing.
O'Connel exercises his right to remain silent and attempts to walk away. Instead of letting him go, Officer Romero immediately grabs him and places him in handcuffs.
When pressed on why he is detaining the citizen, Officer Romero claims he has "reasonable suspicion." However, as O'Connel rightly points out on the scene, recording from a public sidewalk and refusing to answer a police officer's questions is not a crime, nor does it establish reasonable suspicion of a crime.
The moment Captain Martin (the supervisor) arrives on the scene, the entire dynamic shifts. Captain Martin instantly recognizes the situation, identifies O'Connell as he has seen his work, and tells Officer Romero point-blank: "He has every right to do that."
The supervisor orders the immediate release of the journalist, leaving the arresting officer to face a swift internal affairs complaint for deprivation of rights and illegal detainment.
In the end in order to avoid litigation caused by the incompetence of officer Romero, their department settled for 41,000 dollars.
This Chicago police officer just gave a masterclass on how to respond to race-baiting BLM activists
Activist: “Prove to me you’re not a racist cop by saying I love Black people three times”
Cop: “You’re a great person”
Activist: “Do you love Black people?”
Cop: “I don’t want to segregate people by race… I look at everybody the same… I don’t judge people by color. I love everybody.”
BOOM
You guys need to see this!
In London, a white citizen gets attacked by what seems to be a black African migrant then as he’s defending himself, the police come in and grab and arrest the white citizen.
This is a direct result of failed leadership in the UK.
WOW!
@TruthFairy131 Look at this fat little pedophile. So happy is he to suppress and oppress his own people.
I guarantee he has raped quite the number of native White girls when he visited the grooming gangs.