When we interviewed the head of the Chicago police union in 2016 about #LaquanMcDonald we asked about a police code of silence. His response: “There’s a code of silence everywhere” and then he brought up churches covering up child sex abuse
That comment by Dean Angelo made it into the @TheJusticeDept scathing report on the Chicago Police Department
Our 2016 @AJFaultLines episode “The Contract” looked at how Chicago’s police union contract gave officers special privileges when they were being investigated in a shooting: police are given 24 hours to “cool off” before investigators can interview them.
Critics say police union contracts build in special protections for officers that create a culture of impunity, giving officers time to manipulate facts. In the #LaquanMcDonald case, the official police story was proven false once the video came out.
In the #LaquanMcDonald case, officers allegedly intimidated witnesses, destroyed evidence, and filed false police reports claiming he attacked them. But video of the incident told a different story: The teenager was walking away as police officer Jason Van Dyke shot him 16 times.
Adam Gross, a member of a task force appointed by the mayor to examine Chicago’s police union contract told us: “We went into the process thinking the code of silence was just this unwritten agreement among police officers to protect one another.”
“And what we found was that the contract itself institutionalises these private understandings among police officers that make it harder to identify and root out bad behaviour.”
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Israel went into overdrive to deny it killed Palestinians at an aid site in Gaza on Sunday but @CNN investigation “points to the Israeli military opening fire on crowds of Palestinians as they tried to make their way to the fenced enclosure to get food.” cnn.com/2025/06/04/mid…
More than a dozen eyewitnesses, including those wounded in the attack, said Israeli troops shot at crowds in volleys of gunfire that occurred sporadically through the early hours of Sunday morning.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), the US and Israeli-backed aid initiative that runs the site, said that Israeli forces were operating in the area during the same period.
As 2024 comes to a close, I wanted to share all of the films on Palestine that @AJFaultLines released this difficult year and encourage you all to watch, share and screen them. 🧵
In March we released “The Palestine Exception” which looks at the crackdown on criticism of Israel on college campuses. In a prescient decision, our team filmed with student activists at Columbia even before the encampment.
In June, we released “The Night Won’t End,” a feature-length documentary investigating civilian killings by the Israeli military and the US role in Israel’s war, following 3 families as they grieve and try to survive.
On MSNBC Joe Scarborough is blaming Trump’s win on progressives for using pronouns.
And now he’s blaming anti-genocide protests on college campuses.
And now Chris Matthews is saying that Democrats lost because they let in “millions” of migrants into the country. This rhetoric is indistinguishable from Fox News.
As @nytimes continues to come under fire for anti-Palestinian bias, Adam Rasgon is joining their Jerusalem bureau. Only days after Israel killed Al Jazeera’s Wael Al Dahdouh’s wife and children, Rasgon co-wrote a @NewYorker piece smearing Wael’s journalism as “Hamas propaganda.”
That article was one of the lowest points for western journalism since Oct. 7 and that’s saying a lot. While Israel was caught repeatedly lying to the media, Rasgon and his co author chose to smear a Palestinian journalist risking his life daily whose family was brutally killed.
Here’s an important thread by @SanaSaeed about that atrocious article
This seems like a big deal and I ask if it goes against the @nytimes policies. As @zei_squirrel found, one of the authors of the “mass rape” story, Anat Schwartz, apparently liked posts saying Gaza should be turned into a “slaughterhouse.” Anat has reported on Palestinians.
And as @RBrulin points out, the post that the @nytimes Anat Schwartz liked was mentioned in South Africa’s application to the ICJ as an example of intent to commit genocide
@RBrulin @nytimes Anat Schwartz seems to have had little to no journalism experience before reporting for @nytimes. She calls herself a “storyteller.” Very concerning to assign a high stakes investigation to someone with very little journalism experience and apparent disregard for Palestinian life