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Writer's pictureBlack Birdseye View

RPD Ex Officer sentenced to 38 days in jail & two years supervised probation for being a part of a RPDs conspiracy to kidnap and frame black men. 



It's wild aint it?..The city of Raleigh paid 2 million, then turned around and paid another $350,000 in the second lawsuit....all stemming from RPD framing 23 people (mostly black men) with trafficking heroin...with NO evidence, no video footage ....NOTHING. 


RPD fired the black cop. Then Wake County DA Lorrin Freeman indicted the black cop, and the black cop was ultimately convicted of felony obstruction of justice and was sentenced to 38 days in jail and two years of supervised probation....for being a part of a conspiracy to kidnap and frame black men. 


ALL those cops listed in the dismissed lawsuits should have been charged with kidnapping and framing those brothers. This framing goes back to at least 2018. The DA didn't even check their arrest records for fraud. Ain't no telling how many black people are locked up right now behind trumped-up charges fabricated by RPD. 


THIS IS HOW WE FIGHT BACK: 


Anyone ever incarcerated in Wake County would be a fool not to look at their arrest paperwork to see if any of the cops listed on it is one of the eight officers named in the dismissed lawsuit against the city of Raleigh... because if they were.....if there was ever a time to hit a lick, it's now.

HERE'S HOW TO TAKE ACTION: 

Now and then, a call for action amounts to the same repeated discussion:

" a whole lot of begging for what should be free." From a distance, it looks like activity, but up close, it is inactivity presented as activity.


TAKE ACTION: If you are or were incarcerated (or know someone who was) in Wake County, NC:


1. Review your paperwork. See if any of the following eight officers are listed.

  • Lieutenant Jennings Bunch

  • Sergeant William Rolfe

  • Officer Rishar Pierre Monroe

  • Officer Julien David Rattelade

  • Officer Meghan Caroline Gay

  • Officer David Chadwick Nance

  • Officer Jason Gwinn

  • Omar Abdullah (who was terminated and convicted of obstruction of justice)

2. Consult an attorney to get your charges reassessed and potentially cleared.

3. The best way to enforce accountability is by hitting the city where it hurts—IN THEIR POCKETS. Instruct your attorney to:


  • Demand justice

  • Clear your name 

  • Seek compensation for your troubles.


Stop protesting and begging and start demanding....That's what you do. The city of Raleigh's agents MUST be held accountable. As I have said before, accountability has multifaceted benefits for society beyond the immediate ramifications of any individual case. It reinforces the principle of social justice and the rule of law and sends a loud message that no one is above the law—not even those tasked with enforcing it.  



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