XPost: talk.politics.guns, talk.politics.misc, alt.censorship
XPost: alt.politics.nationalism.white
On Sat, 24 Jun 2023 16:05:45 -0700, D. Ray wrote:
A white undercover cop claims his colleagues of color refused to give him backup during violent confrontations with suspects because of his race, forcing him to quit the force in fear for his life.
<https://nypost.com/2023/06/24/white-nypd-detective-was-targeted-because-of-race-suit/amp/>
Too many newsgroups, let's remove the irrelevant one
so I can reply: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
Here's a picture of bad cops vs. a possibly good cop, where
the bad cops assist in beatings of the police:
I tried to post:
excerpts:
A white undercover cop claims his colleagues of color refused to give him backup during violent confrontations with suspects because of his race, forcing him to quit the force in fear for his life.
he could have been killed at least twice after Hispanic, Asian and black cops working with him stood idly by while he was attacked twice during drug buys gone awry in 2019,
While training for undercover work, Olsen said he was the only white officer.
A senior detective ominously commented: "A white undercover, this will be fun."
Within his first few months on the job, Olsen said he was surrounded and punched in the face in front of a car full of detectives during a drug buy in Harlem.
The other detectives photographed the attack but did not intervene because they didn´t want to risk "being tainted by association with a white undercover," Olsen said in court papers.
"They watched [the attacker] walk back inside the housing projects," Olsen said. "It was totally against our rules for narcotics to let that go."
Undercover detectives are required to have another officer nearby, called a "ghost," who can jump in when danger arises, Olsen said. But he was often ghosted by his ghost.
"The second an undercover´s life is in danger or someone gets assaulted, the field team is supposed to move in immediately to apprehend the person and rescue the officer," he said.
After the incident, the lead detective told him, "Sorry kid, I´m not doing anything, this isn´t 1992," according to the filing.
In July 2019, Olsen said he was forced to chase down and fight a drug dealer who pulled a knife on him in Hamilton Heights.
The dealer had ordered Olsen to smoke crack to prove he wasn´t a cop, but Olsen tried to talk his way out of it, he said.
Olsen pulled his gun and chased and finally subdued the suspect, but tore his labrum and rotator cuff during the scuffle, which sidelined him until January 2020, according to his lawsuit.
"My life was in danger and I know that no one is coming to save me because of that last time so I had to do what I had to do," Olsen said.
his bosses made "his life as uncomfortable as possible" including a superior who made a comment about his military service.
"He said `I´m going to make your life very miserable, I´m going to be on top of you ...everything you do I´m going to be looking for mistakes,'" Olsen said. "And I don´t know why, but at the end he said, `It´s because you´re a military guy.'"
"I did not expect that at all," Olsen added. "He said it was because I was a military guy, but I think it was also because I was a white undercover and they were trying to get rid of me."
He resigned in May 2022, despite being 13 years short of a full NYPD pension.
"I fought in Afghanistan, I was in special ops in the South Bronx, I was an undercover in Narcotics in Harlem, but I think that was one of the most traumatic experiences of my life -having the whole NYPD weaponized against me," Olsen added.
ultimately led to his resignation out of fear for his safety
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