Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
January 14, 2014
The acquittal of two Fullerton, California police officers in the beating death of Kelly Thomas, a homeless man who was pummeled into a coma as he begged for his life, underscores the fact that cops now have a license to murder.
Thomas, a mentally disabled homeless man, was beaten, tasered,
suffocated and pistol whipped as he lay on a street corner being sat on by no
less than six police officers during an incident in July 2011.
In what is undoubtedly one of if not the most disturbing police
brutality videos ever, Thomas can be heard pleading for his father, moaning,
“Daddy, daddy, they are killing me,” as officers prolong the assault.
According to the jury in the case, who found officer Manuel Ramos
and officer Jay Cicinelli not
guilty on all charges of murder and manslaughter, Thomas just coincidentally
chose to die of an undiagnosed heart condition in hospital five days after the
beating having never regained consciousness.
Police claimed that the brutal pummeling they inflicted on Thomas,
illustrated by shocking photos of his bloodied and swollen body, was a justified
response to his pathetic attempts to resist being murdered.
“These peace officers were doing their job. They had no malice in
their heart,” said John Barnett, an attorney for Ramos.
Ramos’ lack of malice was clearly evident during the encounter,
when he grunts at Thomas, “You see these fists? They’re about to f**k you
up.”
Claims made by police that Thomas was resisting because he was on
drugs were disproved by toxicology reports which found no drugs in Thomas’
system.
“I’m just horrified. They got away with murdering my son,” Cathy
Thomas, the victim’s mother, told reporters.
“This is carte blanche to police officers to do whatever they
want,” said Ron Thomas, the victim’s father and a retired Sheriff’s Deputy.
The jury bought the argument made by the prosecution that a
prostrate and unarmed Thomas posed a threat to six armed police officers, which
as William Norman Grigg highlights, now means that any meager form of resistance
against sustained violence metered out by police officers is justification for
murder.
“John Barnett, the police union attorney who represented the
killer cops, insisted that the beating was an appropriate response to Thomas’s
pathetic, doomed struggle to save his life, writes
Grigg, adding, “The jury validated the argument that the act of resisting
such criminal violence is a capital offense worthy of summary execution.”
Watch the full video of cops beating Thomas to death below.
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