Disir
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- Sep 30, 2011
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For nearly two weeks, a tale of police brutality in Tucson has circulated on the internet, prompting a slew of calls and emails to police headquarters and City Hall.
It claims a young Black man was “beaten, tasered and abused by four white cops for 45 minutes.”
The law enforcers had “fury in their eyes” as they pummeled the suspect without regard for whether he lived or died, it says.
The police “did not care if this Black man went out in handcuffs or a body bag,” says the social media account of the Dec. 1 domestic violence arrest of Christopher Bullock, 23.
The day after Bullock’s arrest, two activist groups — Black Lives Matter Tucson and Los Angeles-based Allies for Black Americans — took to Twitter and Facebook to demand accountability from the Tucson Police Department.
WTF is wrong with people? Really.
It claims a young Black man was “beaten, tasered and abused by four white cops for 45 minutes.”
The law enforcers had “fury in their eyes” as they pummeled the suspect without regard for whether he lived or died, it says.
The police “did not care if this Black man went out in handcuffs or a body bag,” says the social media account of the Dec. 1 domestic violence arrest of Christopher Bullock, 23.
The day after Bullock’s arrest, two activist groups — Black Lives Matter Tucson and Los Angeles-based Allies for Black Americans — took to Twitter and Facebook to demand accountability from the Tucson Police Department.
Tucson police: Activists promote false brutality claim on social media
The day after the seemingly routine arrest, two activist groups — Black Lives Matter Tucson and Los Angeles-based Allies for Black Americans — each took to Twitter and Facebook to
tucson.com
WTF is wrong with people? Really.