January 5, 2012
State Police Under Scrutiny After Arrest of Statie
The idea that Internal Affairs divisions of police departments, the FBI and the Department of Justice take complaints seriously is laughable. (See e.g., J. Christian Adams new book, "Injustice.") Usually after a civilian files a complaint with police about police misconduct, the offending officer visits the complainant to abuse them further. When I filed a complaint the Cambridge police arrested me and conduct criminal harassmenet 20 years later. The recent arrests of state police are the tip of the iceberg of police abuses in the Bay State. If staties are openly violating criminal laws, what are local police and the FBI doing? Why was the FBI protecting the bookie in this case? How many gambling rings and drug rings are run by the FBI? Are they doing research as the psychology professors do, who keep child porn on their computers?
[From article]
"A Wayland police report from last June, [. . .] details a divorced woman’s claims that after she and the married Analetto broke off an affair last February, she received numerous daily calls and texts. The woman told Wayland cops she felt “intimidated” because Analetto was a trooper, and interpreted some of his “rude, disrespectful” messages “as indirect threats,” the report states.
[. . .]
Wayland Police Chief Robert Irving told the Herald his officers notified Analetto’s commander and state police Internal Affairs. “We gave them all the information we had,” he said.
http://bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1393359
Brass revisit past allegations vs. trooper
By Laurel J. Sweet
Boston Herald
Thursday, January 5, 2012
[From article]
"A Wayland police report from last June, [. . .] details a divorced woman’s claims that after she and the married Analetto broke off an affair last February, she received numerous daily calls and texts. The woman told Wayland cops she felt “intimidated” because Analetto was a trooper, and interpreted some of his “rude, disrespectful” messages “as indirect threats,” the report states.
[. . .]
Wayland Police Chief Robert Irving told the Herald his officers notified Analetto’s commander and state police Internal Affairs. “We gave them all the information we had,” he said.
http://bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1393359
Brass revisit past allegations vs. trooper
By Laurel J. Sweet
Boston Herald
Thursday, January 5, 2012
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