>>>> The pink jumpsuit guy is posting more idiotic rants here.
>> MEXICAN CRIMINAL TRASH.
Dirty Cop Arpaio's jail:
Although many healthy men and women have exited Arpaio’s jails in a
gurney, it seems that the infirm and disabled are at particularly
high
risk in Maricopa County’s gulags. In fact, in some cases, it seems
that they are singled out for abuse.
http://www.arpaio.com/why-arpaios-gotta-go/2.phpIn
1996 a young man named Jeremy Flanders was beaten nearly to death by
fellow inmates in Tent City. He was put on life support and during
that time his head had swollen so badly that it nearly swallowed his
ear on one side. Flanders, who was well behaved and a favorite of
the
guards, sustained permanent brain damage as a result of his injuries.
The weapon used to beat Flanders was a rebar tent stake
That same year, Scott Norberg died of positional asphyxia after being
beaten and forced into a restraint chair by guards. Norberg was tased
more than twenty times although he was fully subdued and posed no
threat to the officers. Research by the (ABC) 20/20 investigative
staff indicates that the officers involved knowingly ignored signs
that they were killing Norberg
Although many healthy men and women have exited Arpaio’s jails in a
gurney, it seems that the infirm and disabled are at particularly
high
risk in Maricopa County’s gulags. In fact, in some cases, it seems
that they are singled out for abuse.
Deborah Braillard was a diabetic inmate who was denied her insulin
for
over two days. When her constant moaning became too much for her
cellmates to bear, the guards moved her to an empty cell where she
could writhe in pain alone. She died in the hospital.
Mentally handicapped Charles Agster, who weighed only a hundred and
thirty-two pounds, was arrested on loitering charges after refusing
to
leave a convenience store. He was taken into the prison hogtied and
wrenched so tightly into a restraint chair that he died within
minutes. Although Arpaio admits no wrongdoing, he refuses to let the
family of Charles Agster see the surveillance footage of their son
being put into the restraint chair.
Paraplegic, wheelchair-bound Richard Post was arrested for being
disruptive in a bar. After some time in a cell he complained to the
guards that his catheter was full. He flushed the toilet several
times in order to get their attention. Instead of giving him medical
care the guards strapped him into the restraint chair so tightly that
they broke his neck. He is now a quadriplegic.
A blind inmate, Brian Crenshaw, who refused to show his
identification
card in a lunch line, was savagely beaten by guards and left in his
cell for six days without medical treatment. Despite overwhelming
evidence to the contrary, Arpaio insists Crenshaw suffered ruptured
intestines, a broken neck, several broken toes, and extensive
internal
bleeding from “falling off a bunk” a little over four feet high