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Police officers attached to the Northern Division watched an alleged male suspect whom they had shot bleed to death on the road for 23 minutes instead of taking him to hospital.
The police version released to the media and entered in the station diary was that around 4 a.m. on June 23, 2018, officers of the Northern Division Task Force were on patrol along Tumpuna Road, Arima, when they shot three men in a black car.
CCTV footage viewed by the Sunday Express of the incident, however, shows only two men in the vehicle and strongly contradicts the police’s version.
The footage shows around 4.25 a.m., an overturned vehicle skids to a stop in the middle of the road. A man in a white T-shirt and jeans crawls out of the vehicle using both his hands and starts running.
He is shot and falls to the ground.
A party of officers surrounds the crashed car, indicating to one another that someone is trapped inside.
Other officers soon arrive and tilt the crashed vehicle to an upright position.
They then drag another man out and place him on the road.
He is surrounded by five officers.
One of the officers is seen stomping his shoe on the suspect’s face, while another officer is seen kicking him about the body. Several other officers soon join in and start kicking, stomping and cuffing the man.
At one point, an officer places his knee on the neck of the alleged suspect while another places his foot on the man’s back. The first suspect lies on the ground, bleeding and barely moving.
One officer stands nearby watching him.
Officers start searching the crashed vehicle, pulling items from inside and dropping them on the road.
The shot man struggles to push himself to an upright position, but collapses.
He is watched by officers who make no attempt to assist him.
elec2020 wrote:https://trinidadexpress.com/news/local/suspect-bled-to-death/article_0cfa2666-94e0-11eb-9c05-a35da34cfd2f.htmlPolice officers attached to the Northern Division watched an alleged male suspect whom they had shot bleed to death on the road for 23 minutes instead of taking him to hospital.The police version released to the media and entered in the station diary was that around 4 a.m. on June 23, 2018, officers of the Northern Division Task Force were on patrol along Tumpuna Road, Arima, when they shot three men in a black car.CCTV footage viewed by the Sunday Express of the incident, however, shows only two men in the vehicle and strongly contradicts the police’s version.
The footage shows around 4.25 a.m., an overturned vehicle skids to a stop in the middle of the road. A man in a white T-shirt and jeans crawls out of the vehicle using both his hands and starts running.
He is shot and falls to the ground.
A party of officers surrounds the crashed car, indicating to one another that someone is trapped inside.
Other officers soon arrive and tilt the crashed vehicle to an upright position.
They then drag another man out and place him on the road.
He is surrounded by five officers.
One of the officers is seen stomping his shoe on the suspect’s face, while another officer is seen kicking him about the body. Several other officers soon join in and start kicking, stomping and cuffing the man.
At one point, an officer places his knee on the neck of the alleged suspect while another places his foot on the man’s back. The first suspect lies on the ground, bleeding and barely moving.
One officer stands nearby watching him.
Officers start searching the crashed vehicle, pulling items from inside and dropping them on the road.
The shot man struggles to push himself to an upright position, but collapses.
He is watched by officers who make no attempt to assist him.
i guess this is the type of policing u guys want in trinidad and tobago.
elec2020 wrote:^i am good Max. hope all is well. i see men tried to slander u again. as i tell u don't be afraid to bring a lawyer for them. there only saving grace is that they did not refer to u by your actual real name. anyway. onto the matter at hand. i am mixed about it. crime has reached to a stage where yh we need heavy handed tactics to get it under control. but at the same time its easy for those lines to blur. and heavy handed becomes the norm. example the incident where an elderly guy (mid 50s my guess) was video taped being kind of choked because he threw away the ticket for not wearing a mask. yh the elderly guy was wrong but the physical assault was unwarranted. when vigilante justice becomes the norm it is easy for the lines between good and bad policing to get blurred. which is exactly what happened in this incident here. as it sounds (IMO) that the guys more or less were um brought to their demise due to the actions of those meant to protect and serve. yes the justice system has faults. but too much police power has time and time again shown to be a recipe for disaster.
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:With gg daughter^!! Ah wonder if men gonna get transferred
sMASH wrote:USSR in effect
So we now getting the truth almost 3 years after the fact. Aite..elec2020 wrote:https://trinidadexpress.com/news/local/suspect-bled-to-death/article_0cfa2666-94e0-11eb-9c05-a35da34cfd2f.htmlPolice officers attached to the Northern Division watched an alleged male suspect whom they had shot bleed to death on the road for 23 minutes instead of taking him to hospital.The police version released to the media and entered in the station diary was that around 4 a.m. on June 23, 2018, officers of the Northern Division Task Force were on patrol along Tumpuna Road, Arima, when they shot three men in a black car.CCTV footage viewed by the Sunday Express of the incident, however, shows only two men in the vehicle and strongly contradicts the police’s version.
The footage shows around 4.25 a.m., an overturned vehicle skids to a stop in the middle of the road. A man in a white T-shirt and jeans crawls out of the vehicle using both his hands and starts running.
He is shot and falls to the ground.
A party of officers surrounds the crashed car, indicating to one another that someone is trapped inside.
Other officers soon arrive and tilt the crashed vehicle to an upright position.
They then drag another man out and place him on the road.
He is surrounded by five officers.
One of the officers is seen stomping his shoe on the suspect’s face, while another officer is seen kicking him about the body. Several other officers soon join in and start kicking, stomping and cuffing the man.
At one point, an officer places his knee on the neck of the alleged suspect while another places his foot on the man’s back. The first suspect lies on the ground, bleeding and barely moving.
One officer stands nearby watching him.
Officers start searching the crashed vehicle, pulling items from inside and dropping them on the road.
The shot man struggles to push himself to an upright position, but collapses.
He is watched by officers who make no attempt to assist him.
i guess this is the type of policing u guys want in trinidad and tobago.
I sure da occifer meeting with GG in d morning done book. By evening his transfer to Matelot police station approve. Cyah be talking to Princess Magaret so bhai.bluefete wrote:shake d livin wake d dead wrote:With gg daughter^!! Ah wonder if men gonna get transferred
Post t'ing nah, Shakes.
She needs an attitude adjustment. Comments section real lit.
https://www.facebook.com/TrinidadBandit ... 3991260060
Defective fittingssMASH wrote:i want him to quote 'broken fog light' charge
hustla_ambition101 wrote:Defective fittingssMASH wrote:i want him to quote 'broken fog light' charge
wtf wrote:Them officers did this to earn ranks against her among their colleagues but it will backfire on them.
Is that how you treat the public? They tried so hard to look professional but came across as third world...
What losers..
Yea he real outta timing. Sounds like a batty man.elec2020 wrote:officer who was taping wanted his 5 mins of fame. hope it was worth it when he get transfer to direct traffic in toco
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