An Alabama police officer is on leave while authorities investigate a weekend arrest captured on video in Reform showing a handcuffed man being hit with a stun gun.

The video begins with a white female officer from the Reform Police Department in Pickens County ordering the Black man to “stand up” after he was handcuffed in the roadway in Pickens County.

She then tells him to lay down on the front of a vehicle, which he does face down.

The officer then holds a stun gun to the man’s back while she goes through his pockets. She tells him to “stay still” at which point he says, “I ain’t doing shit, bro. I got a gun right there.”

The officer laughs as she retrieves the gun and says, “Oh yea.”

She then deploys the stun gun directly into the man’s back, telling him to “shut the (expletive) up” as he screams.

The man then begins to cry, repeatedly saying, “Oh my God.”

The officer then says, “Do you want it again?” as the man continues to cry. “Shut your bitch ass up,’’ the officer says

  • 𝐘Ⓞz҉@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    The reason these people behave such a way is they deal with all kind of shitty people day in day out. They reach the point where there’s no humanity left in them and they look at the the same way. I don’t blame cops, the work itself is shitty. No matter if you put even Gandhi in police force after 3-4, years he’ll become Gaddafi.

    • blunderworld@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Lots of people have shitty jobs. Most of us wouldn’t blow off a little steam by torturing a handcuffed person?

      You’re a fucking dope.

        • mapiki@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          Nurses deal with criminals, mentally ill, homeless, and people resisting their help for 12 hours a shift on weekdays, weekends, and nights. They don’t go crazy on people.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              ER nurses deal with far more criminals, mentally ill people and homeless people than any single cop because all the cops drop those people off at the ER when they don’t want to deal with them.

              And nurses still don’t act like power-hungry monsters whenever they face those people.

              Maybe the problem isn’t the job, maybe the problem is the sort of people who would be willing to take the job.

    • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      “Their job is hard sometimes, so that’s why its okay for them to torture people.”

      Shut the fuck up.

    • seathru@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Wow, that went past licking the boot, straight to taking it to the hilt.

    • BigMacHole@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      I’m glad we can find ways to defend these poor officers who literally get away with murdering kids!

    • davysnavy@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I don’t think you’re wrong. It doesn’t make their actions excusable, but it does make me wonder if there’s something we can do at the societal level to make their jobs less… dehumanizing. I’m also gonna be that guy and point out the irony that the people who are so bent on fixing systemic oppression at the societal level are the same ones who treat cops as if they’re all evil individuals operating in a vacuum and wanna “defund the police.” Like ok… then what. Victimization is a drug for these people.

      Obviously police work is going to attract narcissists and sociopaths, and obviously there will always be an abuse of power at play. We need practical laws and regulations to keep them in check. And we definitely need to stop letting them investigate themselves lol.

      • blunderworld@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        It would probably be a big help if they actually bothered to train Police officers properly in the US. An average of 21 weeks of training – especially with more focus on firearm training than deescalation – is not enough for a job that often involves lethal force.