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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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#ThankYou @pgpdnews đđŽđ˝ ăťăťăť I scream, you scream, we all scream for ICE CREAM!!!! Itâs all fun and games at the District 7 âIce Cream Socialâ. Thank you @mmmgoodies for all of the deliciousness đ #icecream #lawenforcement #communitypolicing #pgpd #mmmgoodies #frozencustard #GODisCEO (at Prince George's County Police District VII) https://www.instagram.com/p/CR4w6GYhtYL/?utm_medium=tumblr
The family of 43-year-old #WilliamGreen gathered Tuesday morning near where Green was shot & killed by a Prince Georgeâs County Police officer last night. They are angry and demanding answers. âWe want to know why our loved one was brutally shot in a police car, handcuffed, seatbelted, & in the front seat,â said Sandra Mathis, William Greenâs fiancĂŠ. Police say they found Green at about 9 p.m. Monday night on Winston Street in Temple Hills. They were responding to 911 calls about a car slamming into parked vehicles. By the time police arrived, Green had passed out behind the wheel. Police say that Green hit a total of six cars before he passed out behind the wheel. Officers suspected he was on PCP and neighbors watched while he was put in handcuffs. PGPD now say they "do not believe PCP was involved." The officer who shot Green, Ofc. Michael Owen Jr., was arrested at his home and taken into custody, then charged with second degree murder and manslaughter. PGPD addressed those charges at a Tuesday press conference, which you can watch below. ABC7 News has learned Owen is a 10-year veteran and this is his third shooting incident, including one in 2011 when he shot & killed an armed man. At some point after Green's arrest, sources say that Owen got in the driverâs seat next to Green and radioed that Green needed to use a bathroom. Those sources say Owen & Green then got into some sort of altercation, & the officer shot Green 7 times. âThey shot my son & itâs not right,â Greenâs grief-stricken mother, Brenda Green, said. âHow you gonna shoot somebody sitting in a front seat of a car in handcuffs & with a seat belt on? Why would you do that?â Greenâs fiancĂŠ said over & over that it makes no sense. âWe have questions thatâs not being answered. We want to get to the bottom of this.â William Greenâs family says there can be no good explanation for this shooting. âI have concluded that what happened last night is a crime,â said Chief Hank Stawinski. As for Green's presence in the front seat: #PGPD officers follow a directive when it comes to transporting arrestees that specifies what seat they sit in. Sources: ABC, WJLA https://www.instagram.com/p/B75a0EiAwW1/?igshid=1bp1ex1hrewq9
To all the Men and Women in Blue, we appreciate you! You are always in our thoughts and prayers. đŽđźââď¸đđŽđźââď¸ #lawenforcementappreciationday #supportlawenforcement #ccso #pgpd #nppd https://www.instagram.com/p/B7Gdm3bHktm/?igshid=1qi76lb9cz9h2

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Chief Kelvin Sewell: Looking beyond the Blue Wall of Silence
Personal experience and empirical data tell us that structural and individual racism pervade every aspect of American life. Yet many police departments operate behind a âBlue Wall of Silence,â pretending that discrimination and harassment do not exist within the force, rather than acknowledging the uncomfortable and incontrovertible reality. Â As the leader of an organization made up of Officers of Color, I know this all too well. Â We confront the Blue Wall on an almost daily basis, and we know what happens when officers who look like us dare to speak out.
When two Black officers at the Pocomoke City Police Department broke that Blue Wall by calling their chiefâs attention to serious racial harassment they faced from white officers, and Chief Kelvin Sewell stood up for them, all three quickly became targets of retaliation.
Despite his tremendous success as Pocomokeâs first Black police chief â doing the tough work of lowering the crime rate and improving relations with the community â Chief Sewell began experiencing intense harassment after he refused to reprimand the Black officers who filed complaints. Â This harassment involved threats using racial slurs, the spreading of false rumors, and lobbying town officials to fire Chief Sewell and the other two officers. Â Ultimately, this campaign succeeded, and all three Black officers were fired. Â
But the harassment didnât end there. Â When the officers filed formal discrimination charges and a lawsuit, it got even worse -- even though the charges they made were sustained by the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and joined by the U.S. Department of Justice. Â Local law enforcement officials who were named in these charges enlisted the assistance of the Maryland State Prosecutorâs office. Â
After a wide-ranging investigation into many baseless rumors, the State charged Sewell and one of the other Black officers with âmisconductâ based on their discretionary handling of a car accident in which nobody was injured and driverâs insurance reimbursed the damage to the cars involved. Â Officers â especially local police chiefs â are supposed to have broad discretion in their handling of such cases. But Officers of Color like Chief Sewell are not afforded the same benefit of the doubt in their decisions as white officers, especially when they have spoken out against racism.
Thankfully, Chief Sewell was vindicated in November 2018, when the Maryland Court of Special Appeals safeguarded his right to a fair trial by overturning his wrongful conviction for his judgment call on this incident . Â The appeals court found that the lower court had wrongfully rejected testimony by two of Chief Sewellâs expert witnesses, which prevented him from getting the fair trial he was entitled to. The conviction was reversed, but the Court remanded the case, leaving open the possibility of a new trial.
To us, it is an indefensible waste of public resources to prosecute â and now attempt to retry â a highly-respected, history-making Black police official like Chief Sewell over this petty disagreement in judgment, when we know there is so much evidence of real and egregious acts of police corruption in Maryland.
The type of discriminatory retaliation which Chief Sewell has endured for breaking the Blue Wall is typical of the unfair treatment faced by Officers of Color in internal investigations. Â When a minority officer commits a minor infraction, the department turns over every rock, digging until it can find something to use against them â even if, as in Chief Sewellâs case, it doesnât quite fit the charge. Sometimes it seems like white police leaders sit waiting for a minority officer to misstep, ready to turn around the minute it happens and position that person as the bad guy. Yet when white officers commit a similar â or even more egregious â act, the department looks the other way, allowing them to get away with it. They forget to interview witnesses, time is allowed to lapse, and steps are even taken to conceal the evidence.
Instances of internal corruption like these are far more deserving of the State Prosecutorâs focus than the petty charges against Chief Sewell. Â Last month, my police colleagues and I in Prince Georgeâs County filed a lawsuit challenging years of egregious race-based discrimination and retaliation both within our department and against the community we are sworn to serve.
Months before we even filed this lawsuit, we sought the assistance of the State Prosecutorâs office to investigate criminal misconduct and corruption we had witnessed at the highest levels of our countyâs police department. Â But we were unable to get any response or call back from State Prosecutor Emmet Davitt. Meanwhile, the U.S. Justice Department and local news agencies have reported extensively on police abuse of force and corruption in Maryland.
Why does the Maryland State Prosecutor insist on looking the other way, still unable to see beyond the Blue Wall?
1 See New York Times, âLawsuit: Police Chief Condones White Officers' Racism, Abuse,â
https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2018/12/12/us/ap-us-police-chief-sued.html [nytimes.com].
2 (see U.S. Depât of Justice, Civil Rights Div., Investigation of the Baltimore City Police Depât
(Aug. 2016) (https://www.justice.gov.opa/file/883866/download [justice.gov.opa])
Joe Perez, President
Hispanic National Law Enforcement Association NCR
P.O. Box 766, Cheltenham MD 20623
www.hnlea.org  240-244-9189
This program discusses "piercing the police wall of silence."
 COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) â White police officers in a Washington, D.C., suburb have used racist slurs, circulated text messages express