Title: Former Prosecutor Says Cops Planting Guns On People They Shoot Is ‘Standard Operating Procedure’ Source:
Counter Current News/FOX News URL Source:http://countercurrentnews.com/2015/ ... s-planting-evidence-on-people/ Published:Apr 14, 2015 Author:Reagan Ali and S. Wooten Post Date:2015-04-17 13:01:09 by Deckard Keywords:None Views:764 Comments:1
Former District Attorney Arthur Aidala has appeared on Fox News many times as an expert they call in to discuss legal matters. But recently, the former Senior Assistant District Attorney for Kings County, New York said something the network didnt like very much.
Aidala said that through his dealings with the New York Police Department in the 1990s, he has concluded that the planting of a taser on Walter Scott, in a recently-released video of the controversial South Carolina police shooting, is not at all unusual. In fact, Aidala says that this is something of an open secret among law enforcement and is standard operating procedure.
When I was in the DAs office in the 80s and 90s, that was standard operating procedure. Police officers I hate to say this would keep a second gun that nobody knew about on their ankle, so if they ever killed someone they shouldnt have they would take that gun out.
Speaking to the South Carolina shooter Officer Slager, Aidala added the following:
Theres going to be no sympathy for this police officer, except for the fact that its a 33-year-old human being who is getting paid $40,000 to protect his own life and protect everyone elses life. Nobody thinks this cop woke up that morning and said let me go kill somebody. He made split second decisions and they were wrong. Obviously he made wrong decisions. Its going to be about, in my opinion, how much jail time does he serve.
It is clear to most that if the shooting of Walter Scott had not been captured on camera then the media and police would have colluded to present the victim as though he were guilty, and even aggressed against the violent officer who fatally shot him in the back.
But the video footage that was taken shows an officer who was very comfortable to shooting an unarmed man, and even more comfortable covering it up. It also showed a partner who did not miss a beat in covering for the shooter, and a department that scarcely questioned anything written in their police reports.
Aidala tells us we should not be surprised. This is the norm in policing the rule, not the exception.