My Freedom Isn’t In Society
Posted by Michelle Moquin on September 7th, 2016
…It’s In The Man I’m Trying To Be
Carla: Your post is still haunting my heart. The fact that I couldn’t find anything is so disturbing to me. I found this on Think Progress. It made me think of your story.
This is such a sad story of a young talented man who had so much to offer and so much going for him in his life. He was taken away…no, he was killed, and who knows if the truth will ever be revealed. Unfortunately this is the case for many who are at the mercy of these “special officers” who rule the grounds they walk.
The Mysterious Private Police Force That’s Killing People In The Nation’s Capital
The last time Beverly Smith had a full conversation with her son, Alonzo, was October 30, 2015. It was a Friday, and even though the weekend had just begun, he was thrilled about the upcoming week. The 27-year-old, who worked with special needs students, had booked several gigs as a part-time portrait model.
When she received the news, Beverly couldn’t have known it would be the last time she’d share a joyful moment with her youngest child.
Early the next day, she sent Alonzo a standard text message about his plans for the weekend, and he responded as usual. But when she sent a second message later that night, she didn’t receive a reply. The following day, she shot off two more texts — both of which went unanswered. That’s when she knew something wasn’t right.
Beverly frantically called Alonzo several times, but the phone kept going straight to voicemail.
On Monday, November 2, she reached out twice — in the afternoon and evening — to no avail. Within minutes of the second try, two internal affairs officers from the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) appeared in front of her house. One was holding a picture of a young black man.
As soon as Beverly opened the door, the officers asked if the man in the photo was her son.
“They said, ‘I’m sorry to inform you, but your son was in an altercation with two special police officers and he passed,’” Beverly said, sitting on her plush living room couch in Anacostia, a neighborhood in the southeast part of Washington, D.C. She had no idea what they meant at the time, and asked if Alonzo was stabbed or shot.
“They said, ‘No Ms. Smith. All we know is that he was in an altercation with two special police officers and he passed. But we want you to know, Ms. Smith, that we (MPD) didn’t have anything to do with it.’”
Special police at Brookland Manor, Washington D.C. CREDIT: CARIMAH TOWNES
Special police officers like the two that killed Alonzo are not quite full police officers, but they’re more than security guards. They are a private police force, empowered to make arrests and carry guns. But because they work for private contractors and not public agencies, their actions are often shrouded in mystery.
Ten months after that conversation with the officers on her doorstep, Beverly has started to piece together a fragmented picture of how her son was killed. But there are many unanswered questions about what happened on November 1.
Witnesses told her family they heard a man running through the privately-owned Marbury Plaza apartments in southeast D.C., pleading for help. He was pounding on people’s doors, yelling, “They’re trying to kill me.”
Around 4 a.m., MPD officers were alerted about an assault. By the time they arrived, Smith’s body was splayed at the top of a stairwell, his head hanging over the ledge. He was shirtless, unconscious, and unable to breathe.
Videos captured on MPD body cameras offer a grainy version of what happened next. Special police officers handcuffed Smith and kneed him in the back, before an MPD officer directed them to make sure he was breathing. When they finally attempted CPR, an unidentified officer said, “All I know is that security had to subdue him, when he was under the influence of PCP.”
Smith was transported to a local hospital, where he died later that morning. Six weeks later, an autopsy report conducted by the city’s chief medical examiner ruled the death a homicide. According to the examiner, Smith’s body was covered in abrasions, chest contusions, and showed internal hemorrhaging in his neck and back. Ultimately, the report says he was killed by a “sudden cardiac arrest” and compression of the torso. Contradicting the special officers at the scene, the examiner concluded there was no PCP in his system, but the 27-year-old did suffer from “acute cocaine toxicity while restrained.” Beverly disputes that particular finding, and has since asked for an independent examination.
“They robbed me of the opportunity of feeling and touching my son’s warm body for the last time.”
On November 3, the MPD said it was investigating the incident, and a grand jury convened in December to determine whether or not the special officers should be charged. But authorities have been tight-lipped about their findings the entire time.
As the MPD remains mum, the private company that the special officers worked for, Blackout Investigations and Security Services, is equally quiet about the homicide.
Almost one year has passed since the fatal encounter with special officers, and aside from the autopsy results, Beverly is still missing crucial details about what happened. She doesn’t know why Alonzo was at the apartment complex. She doesn’t know the names of the special officers who apprehended her son, why they had done so in the first place, and how Alonzo sustained all of his injuries.
What she does know is that she never had a chance to say goodbye. Though Alonzo was still alive when they took him to the hospital, no one contacted Beverly until more than a day after his death. She was told the officers had no way to find her. To her, that remains one of the biggest injustices of all.
“That will be unforgivable. Because my son had his phone on him and they claimed they could not find me,” Beverly said. “They robbed me of the opportunity of feeling and touching my son’s warm body for the last time.”
Alonzo had an incredible work ethic, always juggling at least two jobs, his mother said.
That drive manifested itself early in life. When he was five years old, living in Maryland with his mother, Alonzo expressed over and over that he wanted a job, Beverly recalled. Eventually, their maintenance man came up with one: repairing a doorknob he’d intentionally broken for Alonzo to fix.
“What was so funny was, he got up the next morning. I was still in the bed sleep. He got dressed all by himself, and he woke me up and said, ‘Ma, Ma! How do I look for my first day of work?’” Beverly said.
That eagerness to help was a trait Alonzo carried through adulthood. He attended Morgan State University, where he spent two years working on a degree in social work. He was forced to take a break, because he was living alone and needed to support himself financially. In the interim, he worked with young people with special needs at Accotink Academy in Virginia — a place where he felt he could truly make a difference in kids’ lives. He had struggled in junior high, and related to his students on a deep level.
“He always felt that he didn’t fit in. He didn’t fit the mold. He dressed real neat — things of that nature. The kids used to tease him on the way that he’d speak,” Beverly said. “He’d say, ‘Mom, those kids are just misunderstood.’’’
In between jobs, he played flag football and wrote poems, some of which he published in a book called Lost Soul in 2013.
Before November, Beverly was tuned in to police brutality happening around the country, particularly after the death of Michael Brown. Yet she never thought she’d be one of the mothers seeking justice — and answers — because her child was killed by police.
Nationwide, it’s extremely difficult to get information from federal, state, and municipal police about any form of misconduct — especially extrajudicial killings. The criminal justice system is designed in such a way that police wrongdoing is nearly impossible to prove.
Time and time again officers who use any type of force lie about their actions to investigators and superiors, in order to avoid disciplinary action. Such was the case when Officer Jason Van Dyke claimed Laquan McDonald lunged at police with a knife in Chicago, when Officer Michael Slager accused a fleeing Walter Scott of reaching for his firearm in Charleston, and when Public Safety Trooper Brian Encinia lied about Sandra Bland assaulting him in Prairie View, Texas. Police accounts are hard to contradict if there aren’t recordings of what happened, and officers regularly turn off their cameras or destroy videos after an incident has occurred.
Procedural failures also complicate the fact-finding process. Oftentimes, officers aren’t interviewed by detectives right away, meaning they have time to come up with false accounts of what happened and manipulate investigations before they’ve even begun. In many cases, detectives stall to allow police departments to conduct their own probes first.
Still, most police departments are subject to public information laws that require them to turn over at least some records to anyone who wants them. Attorneys, investigators and journalists rely on this access to expose misconduct.
Special police officer activity is even harder to track. As is the case with the two involved in Smith’s homicide, official investigations are conducted behind closed doors. And because they technically work for private companies, special officers and their employers aren’t legally obligated to respond to public records requests.
Beyond DC, a handful of cities and states contract with security companies to employ special police officers who face far less scrutiny than traditional law enforcement, even though they operate almost identically. These companies establish their own standards and procedures, disciplinary measures, and managerial discretion. They are then hired by local businesses, government agencies, schools, and developers who might want extra security in their buildings— many of which are occupied by poor residents of color.
Today, D.C. has 120 private companies that employ 16,580 law enforcement agents: 7,720 special officers along with 8,860 guards, stationed at apartment buildings, colleges, commercial buildings, and hospitals, compared to approximately 3,700 MPD officers in the city. Some are stationed in D.C. government buildings, including the Wilson Building, where the mayor and city council member’s offices are located. And 4,523 of those special officers are armed.
Even though they are hired by private companies, special officers are commissioned by the city government to work alongside but independently of the MPD.
The primary difference between the MPD’s officers and special officers is that the latter group’s authority is limited to the private properties they’re hired to protect, whereas the MPD has jurisdiction everywhere. In many ways, though, the line between MPD officers and special officers is a blurry one.
A General Order released by the MPD in 1993 says special officers function much like MPD officers in that they have the power to make arrests and carry firearms — privileges that private security guards aren’t afforded. Special officers are also allowed to use force on the properties they’re employed to oversee.
“You can’t just have an MPD officer just stationed in a building all day long. You can have a special police officer or security officer do that,” Helder Gil, a legislative analyst for the City Administrator’s office, told ThinkProgress. “So if you’ve got a situation where there’s a break-in at a building, a special police officer can arrest the individual for breaking into the building, [and] hold that individual until MPD officers arrive on scene.”
Before they operate in the field, special officers go through a background check by the MPD’s Security Officers Management Branch (SOMB).
“The problem is power. We don’t have the power to tell the police the way that they’re supposed to behave.”
With such a robust presence throughout the city, there are certainly times when special officers are able to protect civilians. For instance, in 2009, special officers subdued an anti-Semitic shooter at the Holocaust Museum, saving countless lives. One officer, Stephen T. Johns, was killed in the line of duty.
As for when special officers use force, the General Order states that they can be arrested and suspended “for any offence which would justify suspension of a member the [MPD]” — a determination made by the SOMB. Discipline falls under the jurisdiction of the companies they work for, but the MPD’s Office of Communications told ThinkProgress in an email that the MPD’s Internal Affairs Division and U.S. Attorney’s Office are responsible for investigating serious use-of-force incidents.
Since they operate on their own, gathering information about misconduct and special officer brutality can be even more difficult than probing government-run law enforcement agencies.
Perhaps the most well-known use-of-force incident besides Smith’s happened in September 2015. Special officers killed James McBride, a 74-year-old MedStar Washington Hospital Center patient who walked out of the facility without express permission. His death was also ruled a homicide, when the chief medical examiner discovered that McBride died from “blunt force injuries of neck, with cervical spinal cord transection and vertebral artery compression.”
Both officers involved in McBride’s death were indicted in less than four months.
Beyond the high-profile cases, however, information about special officers’ use of force throughout the city is extremely limited. What little information is available paints a picture of an unaccountable body of agents that frequently uses abusive tactics.
To understand this dynamic, one only needs to visit Brookland Manor, an affordable housing complex made up of 535 units in Northeast D.C. The property owner, Mid-City Financial, wants to demolish and rebuild the property, and housing lawyers contend that it hired special officers to intimidate residents and force them to leave. Mid-City Financial did not respond to request for comment on these allegations.
Special police prevent residents from smoking outside, leaning on fences surrounding the apartment buildings, standing on grass and steps, and playing loud music, according to Vincent DeLaurentis of ONE DC, an organization dedicated to housing equity that works closely with the Washington Legal Clinic. If people are caught breaking the rules, they’re cited for infractions and threatened with eviction. Those who aren’t on the lease — including children and unwed domestic partners — are handed barring notices that prohibit them from walking on Brookland Manor property altogether.
“Every day it’s a different rule or something where they got to say something to us,” Neeka Sullivan, who’s lived at Brookland Manor for about nine years, told ThinkProgress.
In her time there, Sullivan has spoken to countless special officers and security personnel who’ve given her contradicting orders. Sometimes she’s allowed to sit on her porch — other times she’s not. One day she’s allowed to play with her grandchild in her building’s courtyard. The next day she’s told to move to the sidewalk, she said.
Because the rules are arbitrary and the threat of eviction looms over them, people of all ages are scared of what the officers will do. Sullivan says kids run away, the second they see special police in the area. She’s also seen the officers “get fresh” with young girls, commenting on how they’re dressed and asking how old they are. When there is a real threat, the officers are reluctant to help and tell residents to call the police, she said.
Another resident with several children told ThinkProgress that she’s received 4–5 notices since a July 4th incident involving her son. When the young boy was playing with fireworks in front of their building, he was apprehended by special officers for being too loud. His mother was subsequently told to keep him under control or the entire family would be kicked out — a message sent to her multiple times.
While harassment seems to be the primary way that special officers target people living at Brookland Manor, residents say physical force is also used at the whim of people on patrol.
Gary Good, a 56-year-old tenant who uses a wheelchair told ThinkProgress that he’s personally been a victim of that violence on several occasions over the five years he’s lived in the apartment complex.
The first time, he said, was a Tuesday in June. He was sitting outside in his wheelchair, smoking a cigarette, but officers nearby believed he was smoking another substance. All of a sudden, he said, they walked up to him and threw him from his chair, onto the sidewalk.
Good said he wasn’t charged with a crime. But two days later, special officers attacked him again.
“The security guards came and for no reason, no reason at all, started harassing me, and threw me out of my chair, threw me on the ground, and maced my face, [and] called me ‘HIV,’” Good said. He bit one of the officers as they tried to force him to the ground, so he was handcuffed and reported to the MPD. “[The special officers] had me on the ground for maybe four hours before the police even came and got me and arrested me.”
He was taken to the police station and charged with assaulting an officer, although he wasn’t charged for an offense leading up to the brutal encounter. His court appearance is scheduled for next month.
With his case pending, Good is searching for justice. He filed a complaint and is trying to sue the officers for defamation of character. So far, though, nothing has been done. Good isn’t certain there will be a way to hold them accountable.
“We’re living in fear. We feel like we’re in prison, and the guards just walk and tell you what you can do and what you can’t do.”
In light of tenant grievances, ONE DC and attorney Will Merrifield of the Washington Legal Clinic recently launched a campaign to mobilize them and teach them what their rights are. The organizers are legally permitted to do so, but they too have been targeted by special officers on the property — told they’re trespassing and threatened with arrest.
Such an incident occurred on August 11, when Merrifield and ONE DC passed out fact sheets and details about an upcoming event to learn more about organizing. As advocates went door to door, two special officers approached them and said they were littering and loitering. Officers also shadowed the organizers, walking behind them as they walked into the buildings to talk to residents.
Still, the organizers’ treatment pales in comparison to what Brookland Manor residents encounter every single day.
“We’re living in fear. We feel like we’re in prison, and the guards just walk and tell you what you can do and what you can’t do,“ Sullivan said. “They’re trying to push us out the door.”
Although they work for private entities, special police officers ultimately belong to a complex network of police in the nation’s capital that operates alongside the MPD, the city’s primary police force, Secret Service, Capitol Police, U.S. Park Police, the Metro Transit Police Department, the D.C. Protective Services Division, and a litany of other law enforcement agencies.
Even without these other agencies, MPD has an expansive presence in the district. In 2012, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) reported that D.C. has the most officers per resident out of every U.S. city with more than 50,000 people.
Though D.C. has experienced rapid gentrification for over a decade, with the black population free falling from 70 percent in 1970 to 49.5 percent in 2010, black residents are still targeted by police at alarming rates. They are disproportionately stopped and arrested, using what some locals refer to as “paramilitary tactics.” The majority of arrests are made for nonviolent offenses, and most occur in wards with black majorities, such as Ward 8, where Smith was killed.
This culture of policing has left many black people wary of law enforcement. A survey of 1,000 residents by the Community Preservation and Development Corporation revealed that one in five African Americans don’t feel safe around law enforcement, compared to 5 percent of white residents surveyed.
Several tenants of the housing project where Smith was killed told ThinkProgress that additional security is welcome. They fear break-ins and other criminal activity in the complex.
But Beverly and other activists think there’s a way to keep residents safe without terrorizing them.
“The problem is power. We don’t have the power to tell the police the way that they’re supposed to behave.”
As protests against police violence sweep the country, D.C. officers and lawmakers have expressed support for small improvements to the city’s police culture. In April 2015, Mayor Muriel Bowser announced that every MPD officer would be required to wear body cameras within 18 months — a decision that earned a tepid response from local activists fighting for reform. In July, ten council members proposed a “ceremonial” resolution to reform the MPD, vaguely asking for the department to be studied and for “necessary improvements to reduce incidences of police shootings and use of violence.”
After Smith and McBride’s deaths, lawmakers also proposed legislation targeting special officers — who aren’t legally obligated to adopt MPD reforms unless they are specifically ordered to so by a general order issued by the police chief.
Last December, Councilman Kenyon McDuffie proposed the Special Police Officer Enhanced Security Amendment Act of 2015, which would require special officers to complete pre-assignment search, seizure, arrest, and use of force training for 24 hours — as opposed to 16 — and 32 hours for emergency protocol training and terrorism readiness.
In June, Bowser proposed even more training, which will be considered by the Council in September. Under her plan, special police officers would have to undergo 80 hours of pre-assignment training and 24 hours of on-the-job training — more than twice the number of hours that’s required of them now.
The mayor and chief cited Smith’s death as the inspiration for reform. Indeed, the proposed training seems to specifically target the tactics that officers used on him.
But many D.C. residents, including Beverly, are skeptical that officer training — which has also been proposed in places like Ferguson, Los Angeles, New Orleans, and Cleveland — will be enough to fix the problem.
Beverly belongs to a coalition of activists formed after Alonzo’s homicide, called the Pan-African Community Action (PACA), which argues that a drastic overhaul of the system is the only way to make real change.
More training doesn’t necessarily equate to better policing, argues Ben Woods, one of PACA’s cofounders. The problem, according to Woods, is the nature of modern-day policing itself.
“They’re doing exactly what they’re being trained to do,” he said.
That’s why community control of police is PACA’s ultimate goal. Down the line, the group wants residents in each ward to have the power to vote for or against the police forces in their community. A randomly-selected group would then sit on a civilian board to steer police policy.
“We’re arguing that the main problem we have is not racist police,” Woods explained, during one of PACA’s informational meetings in Ward 8. “The problem is power. We don’t have the power to tell the police the way that they’re supposed to behave.”
If civilians have no authority, cops can keep killing people like Alonzo and get away with it.
“I want to say, ‘I’m paying your salary. This is what you’re gonna do if you’re going to patrol this neighborhood,’” Woods added. “‘If you’re not gonna do it, you’re gonna leave.’ Not just say that, I want to actually be able to fire them if they don’t do it.”
Even if the MPD were to fully embrace these community-based reforms, however, they still wouldn’t touch privatized police forces.
By law, companies are autonomous entities with legal authority to hire and fire their own employees. They aren’t beholden to the same rules and regulations that govern the public sector, so reforms to public officers wouldn’t stop them from employing additional security personnel. Preventing companies from using special officers in particular would require new corporate laws.
Under a community-control model, members of the board could potentially amend the General Order that gives them arrest, use of force, and firearm powers to assist the MPD.
Since day one, Alonzo has always been at the heart of PACA’s mission and work. The group launched the Justice 4 Zo campaign last year to demand accountability for the special officers involved, calling for the officers to be charged, a full explanation about what transpired on the morning of November 1, and more transparency among private police forces.
To Beverly, seeking justice for Alonzo is part and parcel of changing the status quo.
Much like she didn’t see her son’s homicide coming, Beverly never saw herself as a community organizer. But educating others and pushing for social change has become a full-time job and helped her push through unrelenting grief.
”My son is on my mind from the time I get up ’til I go to bed,” she said. “The most important thing for me right now that keeps me from not losing my mind is actively being involved and fighting for justice for my son — talking about it, going on radio shows, rallies and marches and things of that nature.”
Alonzo motivates her work, but Beverly also feels a responsibility to help black people in general, due to the fact that they are disproportionately killed by law enforcement.
“Everything basically has changed. I’m just not the same person anymore. I guess they say it’s part of the grieving process,” she said.
When she’s not on the go, Beverly crochets and makes spiritual plates to stay busy. Despair tends to hit her hardest during those quiet, lonely moments. She’s struggled with deep depression, ever since Alonzo was killed, and is easily triggered — breaking down in public at random times.
Beverly also lives her life in a state of panic.
“Sometimes I’m up 24 hours, 48 hours ‘cause of the anxiety level,” she explained. “I’m always wondering, ‘Who are these special police officers? What happened?’ On top of grieving and losing my son, him being murdered — not knowing what happened — makes it harder.”
Until she finds the answers to her burning questions, she’ll never stop searching for them.
“I don’t look at it as a burden,” she said. “I look at it as a duty to fight for justice for my son and for others.”
💪🏽♀♥️
Readers: Once again, it looks like these “special officers” don’t have any accountability for their killings. Another black kid who will never reach his full potential because he was murdered. My heart goes out to Beverly Smith and all the other black people who lose their loved ones from brutal thugs. This time from officers who prey on people in communities who don’t have any power because they don’t have a say in how the officers should behave.
It’s infuriating and frustrating to me. And sad, so sad. For some reason this one has gotten to my emotions. Perhaps it is because of his profound poems that move me so, or his promising life full with potential that will never be realized, leaving so many missing out of what he would’ve shared with the world.
I feel helpless. My heart feels heavy. God knows how his mother must feel. I HOPE for her sake, Ms Smith stays strong in pursuing getting justice for her son and others like him.
Zen Lill: I guess we were on the same google path. I just noticed when I was catching up on reading that you found Fembot’s post at Snopes too. :)
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September 7th, 2016 at 2:30 pm
Wow, I can’t imagine having so little recourse against private agencies that basically do whatever they want and that is behaving like paid thugs. I’m glad she’s being vocal about it, it’s the start to making changes.
Fembot, I think it’s time for you to relax, we checked snopes at same time (see above) and if you’ve been here any amount of time you’ll know that someone, Mischa, me or any one world research outrageous claims posted here, so calmevous, and PS you sound a little jeli, Hun.
and ‘Big Head’ was a generous and loving mafia man I used to know years ago, so thanks for that memory : )
It’s Michelle’s blog and we’re all clear on that…I just happen to be here almost everyday. If you don’t like my comments, you are free to scroll to the next one, that’s the beauty of this space.
Luv, Zen Lill zzzzz aka Big Head
Can you hear me laughing?
September 7th, 2016 at 2:35 pm
Mischa, you wouldn’t happen to have the original recipe for the bone broth the aliens posted here long ago, would you? I’ve altered it so much from memory over the years since a computer crash but would like to check if I’m doing it justice still! Thanks in advance, ZL
September 8th, 2016 at 4:49 pm
Fembot Says:
September 7th, 2016 at 9:09 am
Geez I didn’t get caught out in any lie. I posted something I saw. Many people seem to do that here. Big Head found something further about the article and commented on it. Why wasn’t that enough? No not enough because Big Head had to stick the knife in twice, even after Michele addressed if. Big Head can’t lose the spotlight. This is the ZL (Zzzzzz……) blog by all appearances. Don’t worry Big Head and your trail of brain farts I won’t provide any more fodder for the air inside that big ole bobbly head full of space dust that you are so blissfully unaware of
=====================
Thinned skin are we?
September 8th, 2016 at 4:51 pm
There are so many agencies like that one Michelle. They get away with their disgusting acts because the white controlled system wants them to be able to do just that.
September 8th, 2016 at 7:49 pm
Michelle I am so embarrassed by the narcissism of my race that would support a totally unqualified person to be POTUS in order to retain their white privileges.
I say this because their is no way an election will put a dent in those privileges which I must admit I enjoy also. Trump is so unqualified as to make it insane to want to see him in the White House.
September 8th, 2016 at 8:04 pm
While trump is lauding Putin as a better leader than Obama. The US is putting training a force to meet the eventual confrontation between the russians and the US over certain strategic areas in the Pacific.
An estimated 18,000 U.S. military service members are scheduled to participate next week in a vast exercise on Guam and around the Marianas to test their readiness on land, at sea, in the air and in cyberspace.
Called Valiant Shield, the exercise will involve the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan, nine surface ships, three amphibious vessels and more than 180 aircraft, according to the U.S. Pacific Command in a press release.
Although the military hasn’t confirmed if the aircraft carrier will dock in Guam, for security reasons, previous exercises have given the USS Ronald Reagan’s thousands of sailors a chance for some recreational time on Guam.
Valiant Shield is scheduled to take place on Sept. 12 to 23, including in deep waters on the Mariana Islands training range complex.
Held every two years, since 2006, Valiant Shield allows the Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps to train together.
Lois you are on point here. Racism is so prevalent among the majority of our race as to undermine the country’s security and ability to conduct actions that could prevent the next World War.
Putin and China are becoming embolden in the concept that the only way to dislodge the Dollar as the world currency is to engage and defeat the US in combat.
Even if Trump loses, the signals sent to those two powers is that the US is already divided along racial lines and the whites can be counted on to support any outside power that promises to help them maintain control over their OTWS.
September 8th, 2016 at 8:23 pm
Lois, I am living the prospect that you dread. Filipinos elected an unqualified creep, Rodrigo Duterte, to the presidency of the Philippines. He is like Donald Trump and what we are getting is a country without laws. The police and anyone else with a grudge can murder someone and label them as a drug dealer and walk away scott free.
Thousands of people have been murdered already and he has been in office only since August. The country is basically lawless.
September 8th, 2016 at 8:34 pm
What we Filipinos may have gotten in Duterte is a paid assassin for one of the most powerful drug organization in the Pacific. He has been hired to murder their competition.
They helped with campaign funds to get him elected on an anti-drug platform.
In a bid to tackle communist insurgents, Davao armed civilian militias, who went on to become death squads targeting others seen as a threat to public order. It was an approach Mr Duterte promised to replicate as president.
“Forget the laws on human rights. If I make it to the presidential palace, I will do just what I did as mayor. You drug pushers, hold-up men and do-nothings, you better go out. Because I’d kill you,” he said at his final campaign rally. “I’ll dump all of you into Manila Bay, and fatten all the fish there.”
He has vowed to kill 100,000 criminals. That should wipe out any competition his owners might have.
September 8th, 2016 at 8:44 pm
The Philippines is a country of tiny penis men who need to act macho to feel like a man. When they are not raping or beating their female population they are strutting around murdering people and claiming they are stopping drugs.
The House of Representatives has approved “in principle” emergency powers for President Duterte to address the serious land and air traffic congestion problems in Metro Manila.
Catanduanes Rep. Cesar Sarmiento, chair of the House committee on transportation, said Thursday members agreed on the move in order to address what has become a national crisis.
“In principle, we will grant him emergency powers,” Sarmiento told reporters after emerging from a committee meeting.
He, however, said they would make sure the grant of emergency powers would be constitutionally sound so it could not be questioned later in the Supreme Court.
How do you do that? Murder is murder. Granting someone “emergency powers” to commit murder doesn’t absolve the person in a true court of law.
September 8th, 2016 at 8:46 pm
HINDI na kailangan ang EMERGENCY POWER para kay DIGONG, gagaguhin lang niya ang sobrang kapangyarihan .. Kung talagang ASTIG at may CHANGE SCAMMING ang administrasyong DIGONG..common sense lang..
1st; IPATUPAD ang ODD-EVEN scheme sa buong kahabaan ng EDSA at sa lima (5) pang stratehic avenue / highway sa METRO MANILA.. Walang dudang luluwag agad ang vehicular traffic in Metro Manila.
2nd; ISARADO at IPAGBAWAL (ASAP) ang lahat ng BUS TERMINAL sa kahabaan ng EDSA..
3rd; IPATUPAD agad ang BRT in three to six months (Bus Rapid Transit) sa Quezon Av, C5, Commonwealth Av, Roxas Blvd at Claro M Recto in Manila, Ortigas Av, TAFT Av at Shaw Blvd.
Kung maipapatupad ‘yan in THREE to SIX months period, walang duda , mababawasan ng mahigit 20-50% ang every-day 24/7 parking lot traffic sa EDSA at maging sa Metro Manila.
COMMON SENSE lang..Pareho lang silang dalawang UGUK, DIGONG at TUGADE …
September 8th, 2016 at 8:47 pm
Just like the marcos dictatorial years, the congress is rubber stamp of dictator dutard !!!
The congress just legalized the dutard dictatorial rule !!!
End the dutard dictatorship !!!
Oust duterte right now !!!
September 8th, 2016 at 8:48 pm
What else is new? Ibigay nyo na rin asawa at anak nyo ke gunggong.
September 8th, 2016 at 8:48 pm
Good news indeed..
More emegency powers to digong will make PH great again…
Just like marcos golden years..
September 8th, 2016 at 8:49 pm
power to kill more to silence the critics & to intimidate possible oppositions,
next, another explosion & Martial will be called in
September 8th, 2016 at 8:50 pm
The complete irony, is that Aquino’s Daang-Matuwid congressmen have made it possible for Congress to become a Duterte rubber stamp.
They used Liberal Party funding during the election campaign, then won majority seats in Congress, then became instant turncoats so that they can be given committee memberships where they distribute the money.
September 8th, 2016 at 8:56 pm
Where else but in racist america can a candidate for POTUS be supported after he calls a de facto dictator a better president than the American one.
Well in an America where the majority of whites will root for any athlete over the black one representing the US one can only expect they would accept an evil dictator over the democratic elected black man.
I can hardly abide my sick racist relatives as they avoided squirming when trump made that remark. How truly sick are the majority of white men in this country.
Can they be in that much fear of the sexual superiority of the black man. I am 43 and have not had the experience of a black dick. This has definitely sparked my interest.
September 13th, 2016 at 7:09 am
Their most romantic trip has been in an over-water bungalow at Six Senses Laamu in the Maldives the place they have been in a position to
spend their days scuba diving in the idyllic Indian Ocean.