Three Baton Rouge, Louisiana, officers were killed and another three were injured Sunday while respo

tigerred59

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Mar 17, 2015
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The defining word here, you racist morons is "responding". Stop blaming OBama and BLM and the Panthers. NIgga's was acting like the hoodlums they are, using guns and cops were involved. This was not a race war, a cop killing venue, it was the case of another day in the neighborhood of black violence and people got killed.

This is not Dallas and its not OBama's fault. Among the dead officers lies several BLACK COPS!!!

Now let the NRA defend this shit....nigga's with guns!!
 
The defining word here, you racist morons is "responding". Stop blaming OBama and BLM and the Panthers. NIgga's was acting like the hoodlums they are, using guns and cops were involved. This was not a race war, a cop killing venue, it was the case of another day in the neighborhood of black violence and people got killed.

This is not Dallas and its not OBama's fault. Among the dead officers lies several BLACK COPS!!!

Now let the NRA defend this shit....nigga's with guns!!
It was NOT another day in the 'neighborhood'. Cops were targeted.
Open your friggin' eyes.
 
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The defining word here, you racist morons is "responding". Stop blaming OBama and BLM and the Panthers. NIgga's was acting like the hoodlums they are, using guns and cops were involved. This was not a race war, a cop killing venue, it was the case of another day in the neighborhood of black violence and people got killed.

This is not Dallas and its not OBama's fault. Among the dead officers lies several BLACK COPS!!!

Now let the NRA defend this shit....nigga's with guns!!
It was NOT another day in the 'neighborhood'. Cops were targeted.
Open your friggin' eyes.
“There was multiple gunshots going back and forth and back and forth before any police ever showed up. This was not a come-at-police situation,” Vancel said. “They weren’t targeting police at first, I don’t assume so, because these were men out here shooting at each other in an empty parking lot until the police showed and then it turned into a gun battle, I’m guessing to try to get themselves free or get out of the situation.”Bitch you shut up and get with the fuckin facts, you racist moron!!
 
The defining word here, you racist morons is "responding". Stop blaming OBama and BLM and the Panthers. NIgga's was acting like the hoodlums they are, using guns and cops were involved. This was not a race war, a cop killing venue, it was the case of another day in the neighborhood of black violence and people got killed.

This is not Dallas and its not OBama's fault. Among the dead officers lies several BLACK COPS!!!

Now let the NRA defend this shit....nigga's with guns!!
It was NOT another day in the 'neighborhood'. Cops were targeted.
Open your friggin' eyes.
“There was multiple gunshots going back and forth and back and forth before any police ever showed up. This was not a come-at-police situation,” Vancel said. “They weren’t targeting police at first, I don’t assume so, because these were men out here shooting at each other in an empty parking lot until the police showed and then it turned into a gun battle, I’m guessing to try to get themselves free or get out of the situation.”Bitch you shut up and get with the fuckin facts, you racist moron!!
---------------------------------- where is the link to the story that you tell TRed ??
 
Din du nuffin' was a nut...
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Baton Rouge Shooter Declared Himself a ‘Sovereign Citizen,’ Which FBI Considers ‘Growing Domestic Threat to Law Enforcement’
July 18, 2016 | Gavin Eugene Long, the 29-year-old gunman who fatally shot three Baton Rouge police officers on Sunday, considered himself a “sovereign citizen,” part of a group that believes government and law enforcement does not hold any authority, which the FBI considers “a domestic terrorist movement,” the Kansas City Star reported Monday.
According to the Star, “Long declared himself a sovereign in records filed with the Jackson County recorder of deeds last year.” In a YouTube video posted on July 10 - days before the Dallas police shootings which claimed the lives of five police officers - Long said he traveled to Dallas and was in town during the sniper shooting, which he called “justice,” the Star reported. Long claimed that history shows “100 percent of revolutions, of victims fighting their oppression, from victims fighting their bullies, 100 percent have been successful through fighting back, through bloodshed.” "Don't affiliate me with nothing," Long said. "Yeah, I was also a Nation of Islam member, I'm not affiliated with it. ... They'll try to put you with ISIS or some other terrorist group – no," he said in a video posted 10 days before he shot and killed Officers Montrell Jackson, Matthew Gerald and Brad Garafola.

Long said he’s “affiliated with the spirit of justice: nothing else, nothing more, nothing less.” According to CBS News, the FBI called sovereign citizens “a growing domestic threat to law enforcement” in a 2011 law enforcement bulletin.” The bulletin said the FBI “considers sovereign-citizen extremists as comprising a domestic terrorist movement." “They could be dismissed as a nuisance, a loose network of individuals living in the United States who call themselves “sovereign citizens” and believe that federal, state, and local governments operate illegally. Some of their actions, although quirky, are not crimes.

The offenses they do commit seem minor, including regularly false license plates, driver’s licenses, and even currency,” the FBI bulletin, titled “Sovereign Citizens A Growing Domestic Threat to Law Enforcement,” stated. “However, a closer look at sovereign citizens’ more severe crimes, from financial scams to impersonating or threatening law enforcement officials, gives reason for concern. If someone challenges (e.g., a standard traffic stop for false license plates) their ideology, the behavior of these sovereign-citizen extremists quickly can escalate to violence,” the bulletin added.

The bulletin noted that two “sovereign-citizen extremists Jerry Kane and his 16-year-old sin Joseph” killed two Arkansas police officers during a traffic stop. “The sovereign-citizen threat likely will grow as the nationwide movement is fueled by the Internet, the economic downturn, and seminars held across the country that spread their ideology and show people how they can tap into funds and eliminate debt through fraudulent methods,” the bulletin stated. “As sovereign citizens’ numbers grow, so do the chances of contact with law enforcement and, thus, the risks that incidents will end in violence. Law enforcement and judicial officials must understand the sovereign-citizen movement, be able to identify indicators, and know how to protect themselves from the group’s threatening tactics,” it added.

Baton Rouge Shooter Declared Himself a ‘Sovereign Citizen,’ Which FBI Considers ‘Growing Domestic Threat to Law Enforcement’

See also:

Slain Baton Rouge Officer: ‘In Uniform I Get Nasty Hateful Looks and Out of Uniform Some Consider Me a Threat’
July 18, 2016 | One of three police officers gunned down Sunday in Baton Rouge, La., wrote about the struggles he faced as an officer and a black man three days after Alton Sterling was fatally shot during a police encounter in the same city.
Three officers – Montrell Jackson, Matthew Gerald and Brad Garafola - were gunned down by 29-year-old Gavin Eugene Long, a former Marine, who later died in a shootout with police. Alton Sterling’s death followed by the death of a Minnesota man, Philando Castile, during a traffic stop days later led to national outrage and protests across the country. In an emotional Facebook post on July 8, Officer Montrell Jackson wrote: “I’m tired physically and emotionally. Disappointed in some family, friends, and officers for some reckless comments but hey what’s in your heart is in your heart. I still love you all because hate takes too much energy but I definitely won’t be looking at you the same.”

He thanked people who reached out to him and his wife in the wake of Sterling’s death and then talked about the “hateful looks” he got from people while in his police uniform and how when he’s not in uniform, some consider him “a threat.” “I swear to God I love this city but I wonder if this city loves me. In uniform I get nasty hateful looks and out of uniform some consider me a threat,” Jackson wrote. “I’ve experienced so much in my short life and these last 3 days have tested me to the core. When people you know begin to question your integrity you realize they don’t really know you at all. Look at my actions they speak LOUD and CLEAR,” he added. “Finally I personally want to send prayers out to everyone directly affected by this tragedy. These are trying times. Please don’t let hate infect your heart. This city MUST and WILL get better. I’m working in these streets, so any protesters, officers, friends, family, or whoever, if you see me and need a hug or want to say a prayer. I got you,” Jackson concluded.

montrell_jackson_post_redo_2.png

Jackson’s sister, Joycelyn Jackson, told the Washington Post that while she understands the anger behind those in the Black Lives Matter movement, “God gives nobody the right to kill and take another person’s life.” “It’s coming to the point where no lives matter,” she said, “whether you’re black or white or Hispanic or whatever.”

Meanwhile, in a speech to the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives 40th Annual Conference, U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch paid tribute to Jackson and his colleagues and called attention to Jackson’s Facebook post as well. “After the murders of five officers in Dallas two weeks ago, one dedicated black officer, Officer Montrell Jackson of Louisiana, gave voice to the dichotomy often imposed upon us when he wrote, ‘In uniform I get nasty, hateful looks – and out of uniform, some consider me a threat.’ And yet even still, he urged all Americans – of every background and circumstance, every color and creed – ‘Please don’t let hate infect your heart,’” she said. Lynch said to honor Jackson’s “service and mourn his loss – and the loss of his friends and colleagues, and of too many others who have been taken from us – we must not let hatred infect our hearts.”

Slain Baton Rouge Officer: ‘In Uniform I Get Nasty Hateful Looks and Out of Uniform Some Consider Me a Threat’
 
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Attacks on police upset military veterans...
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Police Shootings Touch Nerve Among Military Veterans
Jul 20, 2016 — Back-to-back attacks on police in Texas and Louisiana by former military men have touched a nerve among veterans who traditionally share a close bond with law enforcement.
Veterans and active-duty troops started posting messages on social media almost immediately after the news broke last weekend that a masked ex-Marine had ambushed law enforcement along a busy highway, killing three officers — including a fellow former Marine. Seeing one Marine kill another Marine after both had returned home safely from the battlefield in Iraq has been especially painful for the military's smallest branch, which considers service life-long membership among a force that goes by the motto: "The Few. The Proud." "In the Marine community, we don't believe in 'ex-Marines'. However that is not the case when one decides to break the moral and ethical values we hold dear. The ex-Marine that opened fire on officers is everything we swear to protect our Nation from," Marine Cpl. Eric Trichel wrote on a Facebook page with about 25,000 mostly Marine members. In an email to The Associated Press, he emphasized he was not speaking on behalf of the Marine Corps.

Many veterans fear the service records of the gunmen will feed a false perception that combat veterans are volatile and violent, turning back years of efforts to change such stereotypes. The Baton Rouge shooting came less than two weeks after five Dallas police officers were killed in an ambush by an Army Reserve veteran who had served in Afghanistan. Gavin Long was based in San Diego with the Marine Corps from 2005 to 2010, according to military records. He was deployed in 2008 for about eight months to Iraq as a data network specialist. People in those jobs are technicians dealing with computers and generally do not see combat. One of his victims, 41-year-old Matthew Gerald, was a former Marine who enlisted in the Army after the Sept. 11 attacks and also served in Iraq in 2009. And the Dallas victims included a Navy veteran who did three tours in Iraq.

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Baton Rouge Police investigate the scene in Baton Rouge, La., where several law enforcement officers were killed and wounded​

It is not uncommon for military veterans to join police forces and vice versa. Both jobs offer a strong sense of teamwork and reliance on others in life-or-death situations — in platoons and out on patrol. Marines in particular carry an almost religious zeal for their branch of the military that they compare to an exclusive brotherhood. "Seeing the gunman in Baton Rouge brought a certain stinging embarrassment to something I hold very dear, being a United States Marine," said former Marine Staff Sgt. Chad M. Robichaux, who also worked as a law enforcement deputy for the St. Charles Parish Sheriff's Office, about an hour's drive from Baton Rouge. Robichaux said he was proud of the police victims who served in combat zones, so the shooting "tears you both ways." One of the slain Dallas officers was a military contractor who worked in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Robichaux was a Force Recon Marine — the Marine equivalent of a Navy SEAL — and said both gunmen seemed to effectively use the element of surprise in their attacks but that he has seen no evidence they were highly trained killers. There also is no evidence that has been made public suggesting either gunmen suffered from post-traumatic stress, said Robichaux, who runs the Mighty Oaks Warrior Programs that helps veterans deal with the syndrome known as PTSD. But he said he wished he had met Long while both were posted in Southern California. "There's no excuse for what he did and I'm not sympathizing with him, but he was obviously hurting in some capacity and needed help," he said. "Somebody may have been able to show him a different way." The military prides itself on its race relations and its history of opening jobs to blacks long before other institutions. Troops often say their only color is "green."

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Hell yes we can blame Obama. Look who calls for killing cops! Look who eats dinner at the WH. Look who advises Obama on race relations!



Take a good look.



 

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