u/Texan2020katza

🔥 Hot ▲ 9.7k r/AllCopsAreBastards+7 crossposts

We have cameras in that town and you cannot get a breath of fresh air in that town without us knowing

Officer who used Flock cameras to falsely accuse Denver woman of theft will face unspecified disciplinary action

A Columbine Valley police officer who used surveillance from AI-powered license plate readers to wrongly accuse a Denver woman of stealing a $25 package will be disciplined, town officials said.

Since Sgt. Jamie Milliman’s false accusation, which sparked outrage over the department’s use of Flock cameras, the town said in a statement that it will work “to ensure that our citizens continue to have faith in our officers and department” and that the officer will receive “appropriate disciplinary action.” But the town did not reveal what discipline the officer faces and did not return emails or a voicemail from The Colorado Sun. 

“We believe in maintaining transparency and will continue to protect and serve the communities of Columbine Valley and Bow Mar with professionalism and integrity,” Columbine Valley town administrator J.D. McCrumb said in a statement issued Tuesday. 

Public records requests from The Sun for documents detailing the disciplinary action have not been fulfilled. Emails and phone calls to Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office records department, which handles Columbine Valley Police Department’s records requests, were also not returned. 

When Milliman arrived on Chrisanna Elser’s doorstep in late September, with a summons in hand, he told Elser he had “no doubt” after footage from the Flock camera in the neighboring town of Bow Mar, along with doorbell camera footage, captured her stealing a package from a porch.

https://coloradosun.com/2025/11/11/columbine-valley-police-officer-flock-disciplinary-action/

Video by Christopher Morgan
@user21732162153263

u/Careless_Mango_7948 — 5 hours ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 49.4k r/badcops+12 crossposts

Guy in the UK gets jumped and mistakes a female cop for one of his attackers. Gets arrested for assault on a police officer

u/457655676 — 17 hours ago
▲ 3.9k r/Reno+4 crossposts

Peppermill Casino Facial Recognition AI Delivers 100% Match Leading to Wrongful Arrest of Jason Killinger

Facial recognition software at the Peppermill Casino scans live surveillance feeds in real time, compares captured faces against a database of previously banned individuals, and issues instant “100% match” alerts that security personnel treat as definitive proof for immediate detention and handcuffing.

Security staff view these alerts on mobile devices and cross-reference them with printed barring notices containing photos and prior incident details, which converts a single facial resemblance into a persistent trespasser profile that automatically triggers future alerts, physical restraint, and police calls without additional verification steps.

Casinos deploy these commercial AI systems for low-cost loss prevention with little required training or auditing, while police respond directly to the generated alerts; the proprietary nature of the algorithms and absence of mandatory human confirmation make false positives difficult to detect or correct before an arrest occurs.

This setup enables the handcuffing and jailing of innocent people such as UPS driver Jason Killinger despite conflicting driver’s licenses and clear physical differences, creating power imbalances where individuals face painful detentions and lasting records with almost no real-time recourse against either the casino’s software or officers who deferred entirely to the AI output.

Sources

Reno police made thousands of unlawful arrests using facial ID

https://www.rgj.com/story/news/2026/04/07/facial-id-lawsuit-reno-police-unlawful-arrests/89491408007/

Details Officer Richard Jager’s arrest of Jason Killinger at Peppermill Casino based solely on the casino’s facial recognition software claiming a 100% match to a banned individual.

Report 6752 - AI Incident Database

https://incidentdatabase.ai/reports/6752/

Documents the Peppermill Casino facial recognition system misidentifying Jason Killinger as a previously banned person, leading to his detention and arrest despite contradictory evidence.

Lawsuit alleges systemic misuse of facial recognition by Reno police

https://www.biometricupdate.com/202604/lawsuit-alleges-systemic-misuse-of-facial-recognition-by-reno-police

Covers the ongoing federal lawsuit Killinger v. Jager in which the officer admitted the arrest based on AI facial recognition should never have happened without corroboration.

Facial recognition lawsuit raises questions about police use of AI

https://thisisreno.com/2026/03/false-arrest-reno-facial-recognition/

Reports that Reno police had no formal training or policies on facial recognition prior to 2025 and that the Peppermill system continues to generate high numbers of false positives.

Artificial intelligence got a man wrongly arrested at the Peppermill

https://www.rgj.com/story/news/local/2026/03/27/peppermill-facial-id-arrest-jason-killinger-reno/89254789007/

Describes how Jason Killinger was handcuffed and arrested after the casino’s AI produced a false 100% match, with Officer Jager initially accepting the software result over presented identification.

u/CollapsingTheWave — 5 days ago
▲ 2.5k r/ACAB+1 crossposts

Bad cop broils 10-year-old daughter in hot car. No charges.

Ten-year-old Aubrey was a fifth-grade student who liked Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Snoopy, the carousel at Kings Island, and playing in the water. Her mother remembers how Aubrey would climb into her lap for snuggles, and how she always asked for a bite of food from other people's plates, instead of eating from her own. She communicated through eye contact, gestures, and smiles.

Aubrey had Rett syndrome, which caused motor skills deficits, developmental disability, and autistic traits; notably, she could not open a car door. Her parents were divorced; her father, a police deputy, drove her home to his house and left her in his truck while he took a nap. Four hours later, Aubrey was dead.

He is still a police officer. Aubrey's mother, upon being told that there would be no charges, initiated a wrongful death lawsuit.

autismmemorial.wordpress.com
u/Texan2020katza — 6 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 7.1k r/ForCuriousSouls+2 crossposts

On May 7, 2008, Rachel Hoffman was killed during a failed undercover operation, following this, Rachel's Law was enacted in 2009. It requires law enforcement to complete specialized training, evaluate safety risks, and offer clear terms to protect vulnerable individuals.

u/FE4RLESS_IS_MY_NAME — 6 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 6.4k r/CantBelieveThatsReal+1 crossposts

In 2014, Navy veteran Chad Oulson was shot and killed in a Florida movie theater after a retired police captain confronted him for texting his babysitter during the previews. Eight years later, a jury acquitted the shooter under Florida self-defense law.

u/Texan2020katza — 12 days ago
▲ 1.3k r/RepublicanPedophiles+2 crossposts

Texas is hyperfocused on the Karmelo Anthony case, they missed and or are ignoring an Incestual-Pedophile & former MAGA Republican Chairmain Bo Dresner get absolutely hammered by a judge. 410 years in prison for raping his 13 year old daughter.

hayscountytx.gov
u/MeasurementNo5430 — 15 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 8.6k r/pissedpatriots+3 crossposts

Police Chased the Wrong Man, Then Eight cops watched as 34-year old Navy veteran John Andrew Jenuwine bled out and died -- Michigan News

Police crashed into a man’s van twice on purpose, fired 27 shots at him, and while the vehicle lay on its side, burning, at least eight cops watched as 34-year old Navy veteran John Andrew Jenuwine bled out and died inside. It turned out police chased the wrong man. https://interc.pt/4vegHtT

An unarmed Navy veteran. 27 shots. A family left waiting nearly 18 hours to find out their son was dead.

Flood Law has filed a wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of the family of John Andrew Jenuwine, who was shot and killed by Washtenaw County Sheriff's deputies on January 6, 2026.

John grew up in St. Clair County, served six years in the U.S. Navy and was, in his father's words, “the son every man wants.”

His parents have faced a pattern of dishonesty from Washtenaw County since the night their son was killed. Those responsible need to be held accountable, and that accountability starts now.

u/Master-Sock-3538 — 12 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 23.2k r/badcopnodoughnut+3 crossposts

Suffolk cop beats man during traffic stop caught on dashcam after he requested a supervisor

u/Stengel_Stan — 25 days ago
▲ 3.6k r/badcopnodoughnut+2 crossposts

A federal jury awarded a 19-year-old college student $105,000 in damages after finding two Newton, Iowa police officers wrongfully arrested him for a DUI, despite a breathalyzer test confirming he had not consumed any alcohol.

u/Texan2020katza — 29 days ago
▲ 1.7k r/Honolulu+2 crossposts

A Honolulu police officer accused of sexually assaulting a woman he pulled over in Waikiki has filed a motion to dismiss the sex crimes charges, arguing the alleged actions happened after the traffic stop ended

hawaiinewsnow.com
u/808gecko808 — 1 month ago