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106,872 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

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Profilbild von beallux⋆ 🦒 ☁︎ ゚ ☾ ⋆ ·
beallux⋆ 🦒 ☁︎ ゚ ☾ ⋆ ·vor 1 Jahr

"sono tre mesi che vedo solo me e giuseppe sui social" cit.

Profilbild von La Contessa Fattucchiera 💙🫶🏻💚
La Contessa Fattucchiera 💙🫶🏻💚vor 1 Jahr

Cara Pupetta sei sempre stata un po' pagliaccetta Dopo 48h smettiamo di Beabaldare Ma tu ci sorprendi e ci fai ricominciare #beabaldi #beabaldiday 💙🫶🏻💚

Profilbild von ariete
arietevor 1 Jahr

❤️‍🩹

Profilbild von Marina
Marinavor 1 Jahr

Vi amo

Profilbild von Imma Battaglia❤️
Imma Battaglia❤️vor 1 Jahr

Noi non abbiamo mai mollato,ma anche tu non scherzi 😜🫵💙💚

Profilbild von denise 🎈
denise 🎈vor 1 Jahr

della serie se non posso combatterli allora mi alleo 😂

Profilbild von Beabaldi_filrouge 🧚🏻‍♀️
Beabaldi_filrouge 🧚🏻‍♀️vor 1 Jahr

Come si smette di beabaldare? Impossibile ❤️‍🩹

Profilbild von 𝔤𝔦𝔲𝔩𝔦𝔞 ➹
𝔤𝔦𝔲𝔩𝔦𝔞 ➹vor 1 Jahr

😭🫶🏻🫶🏻🫶🏻

Profilbild von Vale
Valevor 1 Jahr

GRAZIE!! 💚💙

Profilbild von Antonella 🔮✨
Antonella 🔮✨vor 1 Jahr

Tra te e Giuseppe non so chi dobbiamo recuperare prima 😂 e che meraviglia vedervi e sapervi così 🥲💙💚

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Illinois Cook County Sheriffs ignorance on full display in a deposition flat out admitting they have no understanding of the law. ​ Meet Lieutenant Don Milazzo and Sergeant Jennifer Larson of the Cook County Sheriff’s Office. In this deposition, watch as they struggle to justify the indefensible: the arrest of a citizen for the "crime" of filming a public building from a public sidewalk. ​Amanda Bergquist was recording her own reflection and the exterior of the Bridgeview Courthouse in Illinois—a clearly established First Amendment right. Milazzo and Larson didn't see a citizen exercising her rights; they saw "suspicion" which was enough in their eyes for cuffs. ​Milazzo approached Bergquist and told her she is coming inside and they will ID her and record what she has done. When she refused to provide ID (rightfully asserting that Illinois is not a "stop and identify" state without reasonable suspicion of a crime), Milazzo ordered her handcuffed. ​Larson physically assisted in the arrest. Bergquist was held for three hours, her camera was seized, and her purse was searched—all without a warrant or probable cause. ​During this deposition, the officers were forced to answer for their actions under oath. The results were chilling: ​Milazzo was confronted with his own recorded words, asking, "Why do we always get the crazies?" simply because a citizen knew the Fourth Amendment. ​The officers tried to hide behind "Qualified Immunity," but the federal court saw right through it. The judge ruled that the right to film in public was so clearly established that any reasonable officer should have known better. Their claims of "suspicious behavior" were found legally insufficient to justify stripping a person of their liberty. ​Cook County eventually settled the lawsuit (Bergquist v. Milazzo) for thousands of dollars—taxpayer money used to pay for the officers' constitutional illiteracy. ​This case stands as a stark reminder that "I thought it was suspicious" is not a magic phrase that cancels the Constitution. ​When officers view the assertion of rights as "crazy" or "uncooperative," they cease to be protectors of the law and instead become the very thing the Bill of Rights was designed to guard against. ​This is mind blowing to hear their answers in this deposition blatantly showing zero cares or remorse for their conduct. The good news is both of these industries are no longer with the cook county sheriff office and no longer in law enforcement.

Giggling Ganon

68,381 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat