During a time when Sexual abuse is finally being discussed, publicly & so many who hear of this abuse are taking a stand & saying No! This will not continue! Police Sexual Abuse is still being ignored.
During a time, much overdue, when survivors of Sexual Abuse are coming forward, no longer afraid of the hell they know is coming once they do, and during a time of 24 hour news cycle & social media, where Sexual Abuse is discussed in an open & honest platform, there is one form of Sexual Abuse that seems to stay out of the spotlight... Police Sexual Abuse.
Sexual Abuse in the Entertainment world: Bill Cosby now Harvey Weinstein Roger Ailes
Sexual Abuse in sports: Jerry Sandusky and so many more!
Sexual Abuse in sports: Jerry Sandusky and so many more!
College Sexual Abuse: The Hunting Ground sexual assault on college campuses.
Religion and Sexual Abuse: In May 2003, Thomas O’Brien, then bishop of the Diocese of Phoenix, admitted to sheltering at least 50 priests accused of sexual abuse, often shuffling them around to parishes across the state.
But what about Police Sexual Abuse
Many of Weinstein's accusers were working in his films at the time of the alleged encounters. "They depended on him for their income, so they were afraid of losing that," Farrow tells NPR.
How is the Harvey Weinstein Sexual Abuse, the Bill Cosby Sexual Abuse, and all the other Sexual Abuse that everyone seems willing to discuss, openly, any different from Police Sexual Abuse. Here is how!
1. The Police Sexually Abuse at a rate higher than any other. Even what I call "Cop on Cop Sexual Abuse".
2. Victims (Survivors) of Police Sexual Abuse, from fear, rarely come forward.
3. Reported cases of Police Sexual Abuse are, most often, never investigated outside of the police department of which the accused officer is employed. Officer Robert W Franklin Everett Police Department. Everett Washington. The #BadCop who hurt me & many other Innocent Everett Woman. Please do read the notes on the Youtube King5 News Report Franklin & The EPD Lied again!
4. The majority of reported Police Sexual Abuse is found "inconclusive".
4. The majority of reported Police Sexual Abuse is found "inconclusive".
5. Most states have no specific laws, in their statutes, that pertain to Police Sexual Abuse.
6. The average Victim/Survivor of Police Sexual Abuse will spend the rest of their life scared of the Police.
7. When the Victim/Survivor of Police Sexual Abuse is ignored, mistreated, lied to, threatened etc, after reporting Police Sexual Abuse, and perhaps cannot find a Lawyer or cannot afford to pay one, where can that citizen go for help? Their Legislators? Their Senators? No!
We can no longer Ignore Police Sexual Abuse, and the Brave Survivors of Police Sexual Abuse, who feel worthless, forgotten, ignored, unworthy, as every news media, on TV and online, is 24/7 coverage of every other form of Sexual Abuse, when the only cases of Police Sexual Abuse that ever hit even the local news, are the high profile cases.
Well, just like Cockroaches...
For every one that you do see, there are 100 more that you don't!
(CNN) Daniel Holtzclaw, the ex-Oklahoma City officer convicted of rape and other charges after he preyed on African-American women over six months, was sentenced Thursday to 263 years in prison, as recommended by the jury, according to his attorney.
Prosecutors said Holtzclaw selected victims in one of Oklahoma City's poorest neighborhoods based on their criminal histories, assuming their drug or prostitution records would undermine any claims they might make against him.
Then, he would subject them to assaults that escalated from groping to oral sodomy and rape, according to the testimony of 13 victims. Holtzclaw, whose father is a police lieutenant on another force, waived his right to testify.
Two of those women shared their stories with CNN on Wednesday, recounting horrific memories of being forced to perform sexual acts by a serial rapist with a badge who was supposed to protect and serve.
Darnell L. Moore is a Senior Editor and Senior Correspondent at Mic. He is also co-managing editor of The Feminist Wire and Writer-in-Residence at the Center on African American Religion, Sexual Politics and Social Justice at Columbia University.
On Feb. 10, 2013, 31-year-old sheriff's deputy Cory Cooper pulled over a 19-year-old woman and her boyfriend in Omaha, Nebraska. After finding marijuana in the vehicle, Cooper ordered the boyfriend to toss the drug in the nearby Zorinsky Lake, according to the Omaha World-Herald. While the man was away, Cooper allegedly told the young woman to follow him back to his cruiser, where he asked her to remove her shirt.