Title: Florida Man Shot by Home-Invaders Treated Like Criminal Over Phantom “Pot Smell,” Coerced into False Confession Source:
Photography Is Not a Crime URL Source:http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2 ... coerced-into-false-confession/ Published:May 14, 2015 Author:Maya Shaffer Post Date:2015-05-16 01:09:35 by Deckard Keywords:None Views:2240 Comments:6
By 2:00 am on May 8, Kris Massey of Lakeland, Florida had already had the worst kind of day. Sometime between 1:30 and 2:00 at least two people attempted to force entry into his home while he and his roommate were present.
The would-be home invader fired a shotgun blast through the front door that left 47 pellets in Masseys right hand. When the Polk County Sheriffs Department arrived, Masseys ordeal should have been over.
It wasnt.
The two responding officers, Sheriffs Deputy Colletti and Detective Kurt Karakash, claimed they smelled pot.
Three minutes after the officers reached Masseys home, an ambulance arrived to take Massey to the hospital. The officers priorities quickly became clear. Serving Massey by getting him needed medical help and protecting the community from the shotgun wielding home invader took a back seat to the Drug War. The ambulance sat for around 30 minutes while the officers questioned Massey about the pot smell.
Even after Massey was taken to the hospital and treated for his gunshot wounds, the officers continued to hound him with questions. Massey says that he was grilled for about five more hours while on painkillers and that at one point, his heart rate spiked up to 168 beats per minute because the officers kept asking him the same questions, are you a drug dealer, etc all because his apartment smelled like pot.
Massey told the officers he wanted to file a complaint against them. Suddenly the officers had a new priority more important than even the drug war they needed to cover their butts.
Sometime around 7 a.m., Massey was taken back home. The sheriffs deputies searched the entire home, and questioned his roommate while Massey was told to wait outside. They found no drugs of any kind. When they let Massey back into his home, the deputies launched what appears to be their Cover Your Ass operation, better known as CYA.
Detective Karakash claimed that Massey bumped into him in the doorway on purpose which constituted an assault on an officer.
The video below shows how Massey was handcuffed and coerced into a confession while still on painkillers. Massey at this point had been shot, drugged, held and questioned for hours until his heart rate skyrocketed, accused of being a drug dealer, forced to wait as his home was ransacked by the officers, handcuffed, and threatened with charges for assaulting an officer.
To say that Masseys confession was done under duress is putting it mildly. Massey still maintains he did not purposefully bump the officer.
To Masseys credit, he had the coerced confession recorded by a friend or family member. The officers took a recorded sworn statement from Massey while he was still under the influence of painkillers and effectively still under threat of arrest. In sworn statement Massey had to agree would not file a complaint.
After the sworn statement, Karakash switches up the story about which of the two officers Massey bumped. Either Karakash forget he has just been assaulted or more likely the entire manufactured confession was only ever about holding something over Massey to stop him from making a complaint.
Massey says he is sharing his story because he is afraid to make an official complaint after he agreed not to in his sworn statement, but he thinks the officer was in the wrong. He is afraid they will come back and arrest him for battery on an officer in retaliation if he files the complaint, and that the bumping and coerced confession were a bullying tactic designed to keep him from filing a complaint.
Ultimately the Polk County Sheriffs Department priorities have been exposed to be disturbingly out of order. The Drug War trumps Serve and Protect and CYA is the most important of all, and they seem to be unconcerned with the shotgun wielding shooter. The final takeaway here is to always film police interactions. Massey has some really strong evidence that his confession was coerced because he kept his camera rolling after the sworn statement and caught Karakash switching around the story.
I'm really surprised the Canaries haven't done a "drive by" on this story.
“Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rapidly promoted by mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.”
#2. To: Gatlin, misterwhite, GrandIsland, Vinny, Percy Misanthrope (#0)
The sheriffs deputies searched the entire home, and questioned his roommate while Massey was told to wait outside. They found no drugs of any kind. When they let Massey back into his home, the deputies launched what appears to be their Cover Your Ass operation, better known as CYA.
Detective Karakash claimed that Massey bumped into him in the doorway on purpose which constituted an assault on an officer.
The video below shows how Massey was handcuffed and coerced into a confession while still on painkillers. Massey at this point had been shot, drugged, held and questioned for hours until his heart rate skyrocketed, accused of being a drug dealer, forced to wait as his home was ransacked by the officers, handcuffed, and threatened with charges for assaulting an officer.
More jack-bootery from the 'heroes in blue".
The kind you all worship.
Three minutes after the officers reached Masseys home, an ambulance arrived to take Massey to the hospital. The officers priorities quickly became clear. Serving Massey by getting him needed medical help and protecting the community from the shotgun wielding home invader took a back seat to the Drug War. The ambulance sat for around 30 minutes while the officers questioned Massey about the pot smell.
Nice job of "protecting and serving" officers!
Truth is treason in the empire of lies. - Ron Paul
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends.
Let's see. 2:00 am. Shotgun blast through the front door. Smell of pot.
I'm going with drug dealer.
lol
I have a neighbor two doors down. Just moved in. I can smell weed coming from his house. Last night, his house was circled by Sheriff's. It appears he is behind on child payments. Why is it that people that don't follow the rules of a civil society also do drugs? The girlfriend wouldn't let the Sheriff's officers in... I'll give you one guess why. LMAO
When they come back with a no-knock... Deckard will make victims out of them. lol
Every society gets the kind of criminal it deserves. What is equally true is that every community gets the kind of law enforcement it insists on. Robert Kennedy
Let's see. 2:00 am. Shotgun blast through the front door. Smell of pot.
No pot.
Guy shot by home invader.
Coercion by cops and lying about "assault" to cover their asses.
misterwhite cheers cops.
"F**k the law" drug dealer gets into trouble and the first thing he does is call the cops and an ambulance.
Yeh - that figures. The guy must be a dealer if you say so.
Truth is treason in the empire of lies. - Ron Paul
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends.
I can smell weed coming from his house. Last night, his house was circled by Sheriff's.
Did you get a reward for ratting him out, or is it still your job to be the neighborhood snitch?
Truth is treason in the empire of lies. - Ron Paul
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends.