Is Your Vagina Drug-Free?

phr

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Is Your Vagina Drug-Free? Albany's Narcs Want to Know
Phillip Smith
Speakeasy Main
3.10.08



Here's an especially sordid and sickening example of abusive policing in the name of the drug war. A young woman driving in the wrong part of Albany gets pulled over by a special, aggressive drug enforcement squad, the Street Drug Unit. As the Albany Times-Union explains:

ALBANY-- The cops in the marked patrol car had circled through West Hill a couple times keeping an eye on their female target.

They were part of the Street Drug Unit, an aggressive squad assigned to help rid Albany's neighborhoods of drug dealers and addicts blamed for much of the city's problems.

It was early evening and already dark when the patrol car's emergency lights flashed in the rearview mirror of Lisa Shutter's Mitsubishi sedan on Quail Street, just off Central Avenue.

Police records show the officers called out a "Signal 38" to alert a dispatcher they were onto something suspicious and about to pull someone over. They would later write in a report that they had pulled her over for "failure to signal," although no ticket was issued, according to police records shared with the Times Union.

The actions of police in the minutes that followed would end in controversy rather than with an arrest. They would also leave Shutter, a 28-year-old single mother from Ravena, shaken and angry after one of the officers allegedly inserted his finger into Shutter's vagina on a public street during an apparent search for drugs.

When it was over, "I pulled off down the road and I just cried for probably a half hour," Shutter said. "I called my dad. ... I felt like I had been basically raped."

Sounds pretty horrendous, but then, so is the response from the Albany police when Shutter filed a complaint:

The incident has triggered an ongoing internal affairs investigation by the Albany Police Department.

But the handling of that investigation has raised questions about whether the department has sought to cover up the incident. Shutter claims Burris Beattie, a commander in internal affairs, dissuaded her from reporting the incident to a civilian police oversight board.

The board, which was formed in 2001 in response to community concerns about the handling of internal police investigations, is empowered to monitor cases involving claims of brutality and civil rights violations against any officer.

"He said they (internal affairs) would do a better job," Shutter said, recounting her conversation with Beattie. "He said they would like to keep it 'internal' ... that that's how they like to handle things."

Good thing they kept it aware from the civilian police review board, because it would have gotten to the bottom of things, right? Well, maybe not. It seems that the Albany board is as toothless and feckless as the rest of those organizations that are supposed to provide oversight to law enforcement:

Jason S. Allen, acting chairman of Albany's Citizens' Police Review Board, did not respond to a request for comment about whether all civilian complaints against officers are forwarded to the board. Instead, someone from the review board, which maintains an office at Albany Law School, contacted the department two weeks ago and alerted them that a Times Union reporter was asking questions about their policies, according to a police department source.

Let me get this straight: The civilian police review board, which is supposed to keep an eye on police misconduct, but when the board is contacted by reporters about an alleged incident, it doesn't investigate, but instead alerts the department? With review boards like this…But wait, there's more:

A member of the Citizens' Police Review Board, who spoke on condition of anonymity because only the chairman is authorized to make public statements, said some members of the board have privately suspected that the department may be hiding cases of police misconduct.

In other instances, the internal affairs reports are so poorly organized and investigated the board has had trouble reaching decisions and often sends them back for more investigation. The board is supposed to appoint a monitor for complaints involving civil rights violations or allegations of excessive force.

"Whether the letter of the law says that this should be the process, the intent and spirit of the law mandates that, especially in cases of civil rights violations, they be submitted to us for review," the board member said. "If not this, what do we review? ... The fact they would dissuade someone from reporting an incident and say they would do the investigation better completely defeats the purpose of why we were created."

One of the two officers involved, Matthew Fargione, is the son of a former Albany narc who is a long-time buddy of the chief, James Tuffey. Fargione Sr. used to be Tuffey's boss on the narc squad. The other officer was Nick Abrams. While Shutter said police internal affairs told her one of the officers had been suspended, apparently that is untrue.

Here's how it went down, according to the Times-Union account:

The incident unfolded just after 7 p.m. on Dec. 22. Shutter said she'd just finished some last-minute holiday shopping and became confused as she drove through West Hill looking for a friend she'd agreed to pick up that night.

Shutter was behind the wheel of a friend's rented car, and said she saw the police car drive past her twice before the stop.

The officer at her window grilled her about drug use and hidden crack pipes, she said.

"You fit the profile," the officer said, according to Shutter. "You're a white girl in a rental car."
She told the officer she had no drugs and offered to take a Breathalyzer test, but he declined to give one, she said.

The officer then allegedly reached through her window and plucked Shutter's cellphone from her lap.

He scrolled through the personal information in her phone, she said, asking questions about "private calls" and someone named "Mandie," whose name appeared on her contacts' list.

Mandie Buxton, 28, who is Shutter's friend since childhood, was at home when her cellphone rang that night. The man calling identified himself as an Albany police officer and asked whether Shutter was supposed to be picking Buxton up that night.

"I said: 'What are you talking about?' " Buxton said. "He said: 'You don't know what I'm talking about?' and then he hung up. I called right back and no one answered."

Ordinarily, police need a search warrant to seize or access someone's telephone.

Before it was over, Shutter was ordered to stand outside her vehicle with her hands on the trunk. One officer searched her body while a second scoured the inside of the car. They also dumped the contents of her purse and asked whether she'd spent her money on crack because her wallet was empty.

Shutter said she never consented to a search of her vehicle, her telephone or her body. She said she pleaded with the officer who allegedly slid his hand down the back of her jeans, and inside her underwear, to stop.

"I kept saying over and over ... 'If you have to search me, can you bring me to the precinct?' " Shutter said.

A female officer was called to the scene and informed Shutter she was there to search her body, Shutter said. The female officer patted her down, lifted Shutter's sweater and felt along her bra strap, and made Shutter open her mouth and lift her tongue. No reason was given.

The police found no drugs or other evidence of criminal wrongdoing before allowing Shutter back in her car.

"He said 'you're lucky' ... and that I better not drive around there again," Shutter said.

Shutter called Buxton and her father minutes later, crying hysterically, they said.

Shutter's mother, Sherry, characterized her daughter's encounter with police as a "life-changing nightmare at the hands of an Albany police officer."

"Our daughter did not deserve to be so grossly violated and I want the officers to comprehend and be held accountable for violating our child," she said. "I just keep telling her that 'you did not deserve this.'"

One question: How many other women have been sexually assaulted by these criminals in blue? Another question: Is it okay for women to be digitally raped by cops if there are drugs in their vaginas?

This story isn't going over too well in Albany, either. Check out the responses by Albanyites (Albanians?) at the Time-Union's blog page.

Link!
 
Oh lawd hell no. This shit is disgusting, outrageous, nasty, wrong, every word you can think of for this. What the fuck?! There aint NO reason for that! You aint got shit in your car, you aint got shit on you, you aint got shit in your purse, or in your bra, HOW THE HELL does that give reason to think that there would be shit INSIDE you?? They shoulda searched her car and let her be on the way, if anything. This shit needs to get some serious attention. the FEMALE cop didnt even check up in her? So why was it OK for a MALE to do it? This shit makes my blood boil yo, some scumbag narc piece of shit tryina cop a feel on some vulnerable confused chick who aint even doin nothin wrong except bein the wrong race in the wrong part of town??

Shit like this, there aint no fuckin excuse for. jus wrong in every way.
 
Haha... I live closeish to Albany, I believe residents are known as Albanians. IIRC, the Shutter incident occurred late last year, it was a matter of some controversy on the local talk-radio circuit.
 
"He said they would like to keep it 'internal' ... that that's how they like to handle things."

apparently so.....literally.

thats fucked up. I hope she files suit against them fuckers.
 
Shit like this really makes me want to go to law school. Nothing would make me feel better than going on vendettas against cops that have somehow convinced themselves that this is ok on any level. I think cops should be scared out of their minds to do things like this and the lesson isn't going to get learned until one of them gets their lives ruined.
 
Man if i lived in the US i would be on death penalty for killing to many cops. No shit, im glad i dont live somewhere where cops fucking pull shit like this. Seriously, if a cop tried to pull one of the many bs ass things they do over there, id pull out a 9 and kill them without hesitating.
 
That is disgusting those offices should be charged with rape and sent to prison.
It shows how corrupt internal investigations is and how the police in the U.S have way too much power.

I wonder how much this happens and never gets reported. Fucking scum bags.:X
 
moonyham said:
Man if i lived in the US i would be on death penalty for killing to many cops. No shit, im glad i dont live somewhere where cops fucking pull shit like this. Seriously, if a cop tried to pull one of the many bs ass things they do over there, id pull out a 9 and kill them without hesitating.

That's a really bad idea. The most common ballistic vest for police is Type II which is rated to stop most 9mm. I'm not sure I should be posting this but certain loads of 7.62x25mm Tokarev have demonstrated absurd penetration ability for a pistol round.
 
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I went to SUNY Albany. I was arrested for poession of 'cocaine residue' on a straw that i had only used to snort K with.

The first time the cop did the test, he did it in front of me. When the liquid in the bag didnt turn blue (or whatever color a positve result produces) he began flicking it, so hard in fact, that it broke and got all over his pants. I had done about 3 lines of K prior to being arrested, and i couldnt supress laughter. Especially when he repeated this, with the exact same results.

Now this fucking pig has TWO wet spots on his uniform that bear a striking resemblance to ejaculate. He repeated the test again while i was getting fingerprinted by another officer in another room, and of course, this time there was cocaine present.

Fucking albany pigs. I had an awesome time at college though.
 
I swear this country is slowly turning into a police state, I cant wait until I get off probation so I can get the hell out of this fucked up place
 
I<3 tabs said:
I swear this country is slowly turning into a police state, I cant wait until I get off probation so I can get the hell out of this fucked up place

If you do manage to expatriate to a nation that's less oppressive please let me know which it is, everywhere I've looked into would be out of the frying pan and into the fire. Canada isn't horrible...
 
The war on drugs has got to end, this story is sad but there are many more innocent victums of the drug war that are dead now because they witnessed something they shouldn't or minorities that are either targeted or get drugs planted on them.http://youtube.com/watch?v=hixltpXMRL8
The abuse of power and the curtailing of our constitutional rights has got to end now.
 
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I<3 tabs said:
I swear this country is slowly turning into a police state, I cant wait until I get off probation so I can get the hell out of this fucked up place

Seems to me your country is already a police state...
 
lagomorpha said:
That's a really bad idea. The most common ballistic vest for police is Type II which is rated to stop most 9mm.
Shoot them a couple of times in the chest so there winded and disorientated, then when i can easily get a clean shot, shoot them in the face. Or, shoot them in the crotch/pelvis/thighs 5 or so times and make them bleed to death

lagomorpha said:
If you do manage to expatriate to a nation that's less oppressive please let me know which it is, everywhere I've looked into would be out of the frying pan and into the fire. Canada isn't horrible...

NZ is pretty relaxed police wise. I have never been searched once, and i look pretty dodgey alot of the time they stop me. The worst theyve done is ask whats in my pockets because i was walking out the back of a building at night with a mate and they thought i was tagging or something. We were back there cause we were walking down the street when we saw some fight/stabbing/what ever(alot of yelling and shit between a taxi driver and some drunk) and we figured we'd just watch and see what happens. They just got statements off us and left.

Generally though, police here are pretty good. The only reason they fuck you over is if they have reason or if your a islander/black, though my brother knows a couple of cops real well and he said that they like to do that because islanders incriminate themselves, you just walk up(as a cop) and they will pretty much just incriminate them selves on the spot even if your just asking what there up to. ''I didnt steal this bag honest'', ''I didnt ask you about the bag.. what are you doing here'', 'na i didnt, you cant prove shit you fucking pig', 'your under arrest'.

If they catch you with drugs they let you go sometimes, depending what it is. If its buds, they will most likely take it off you and let you go. Same goes for knives, my mate has a pretty big combat knife when he was drunk, and they didnt even arrest him for having it and being an idiot with it, they just took it off him. Oh and you dont get arrested for nothing, either, like ive noticed alot of american police like to do 8)
 
Yeah i think the whole scare tactic thing has proven pretty unsuccessful already.

Even if someone is a drug addict, your not going to scare him away from coming back to that corner no matter what.

Its thinking like this that gets the police nowhere.
 
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