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  • 5
    Dec
    2011
    3:47pm, EST

    Mass. official tells of pervasive fraud in mortgages

    By msnbc.com staff

    As we reported last week, Massachusetts' attorney general is suing the top five U.S. banks, charging they foreclosed illegally on homes in the state and used deceptive loan servicing practices, including robo-signing.

    In the video below, NBC News’ Lisa Myers meets with John O’Brien, register of deeds, in South Essex County, Mass., who says his department found 26,000 fraudulent mortgage documents following an investigation.

    O’Brien say he is troubled that he can’t “look a constituent in the eye and tell them who owns their mortgage. That’s very sad.”

    “(The banks) are filing fraudulent documents to take their homes away from them,” O’Brien said.

     

    14 comments

    The BANKS, their LOBBYISTS and the POLICTICIANS that supported these big banks have DESTROYED THE USA. These vermin 5CUM should be put in jail and charged with either TREASON or CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY. To fraudulently make documents and destroy families by uprooting them is despicable.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: real-estate, video, featured
  • 27
    Jun
    2011
    5:19pm, EDT

    Woman who recorded police is off the hook

    The Rochester New York District Attorney has dismissed charges against Emily Good, who was arrested while videotaping police making a traffic stop in front of her home. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson
    NBC News

    After a protest by supporters today outside the Rochester, N.Y., Hall of Justice, authorities dropped all charges against Emily Good, 28, who was arrested last month for video recording the police from her front yard and refusing an officer’s order to go into her house, NBC station WHEC reported. 

    Good said she was recording a traffic stop in front of her home May 12 because she suspected that the driver, a young black man, was the target of racial profiling.

    In a joint statement supporting the decision to drop the charges, Rochester's mayor, City Council president and police chief said today:

    "Whatever the outcome of the internal review, we want to make clear that it is not the policy or practice of the Rochester Police Department to prevent citizens from observing its activities — including photographing or videotaping — as long as it does not interfere with the safe conduct of those activities."

    Police across the country have come under scrutiny for arresting otherwise uninvolved bystanders who pull out video cameras and phone cameras to document their activities — a practice many civil liberties advocates say is protected because police officers are public officials performing public duties. 


    The American Civil Liberties Union contended in an Illinois lawsuit last year that "individuals ... may make audio (and video) recordings of police who are performing their public duties in a public place and speaking in a voice loud enough to be heard by the unassisted human ear."

    Other advocates warn that police first have a duty to protect the public — which can include bystanders with cameras, as well as other bystanders who may be imperiled by the officer's distraction with the camera.

    "An officer who takes his or her attention away from the task at hand to worry about a person running video is going to suffer from split-attention deficit," Sgt. Ed Flosi of the San Jose, Calif., Police Department told PoliceOne, a journal for law enforcement professionals. "When a person is forced to focus on more than one item, the amount of focus on either item suffers. In other words, they may miss something that the primary suspect(s) is doing that could get them hurt or killed."

    182 comments

    the officer who is making the arrest should keep doing his job.....it shouldnt matter if he/she is being taped.....their actions should speak for itself....good or bad. You can tell if the suspect is starting something or the officer.

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    Explore related topics: police, video, public, cameras, first-amendment
  • 22
    Jun
    2011
    6:30pm, EDT

    Citizen arrested for videotaping police from front yard

    By Mike Brunker, Investigations Editor, NBC News
    NBCNews.com

    As video cameras grow ever more ubiquitous, confrontations -- both legal and physical -- over their use are becoming more common.

    Case in point: NBC affiliate WHEC-TV in Rochester, N.Y., reported Tuesday on an incident in which police arrested a woman who filmed a traffic stop from her front yard and refused an officer’s order to go into her house.  The woman, 28-year-old Emily Good, was later charged with a misdemeanor: obstructing governmental administration.

    As WHEC reports in this follow-up story, “The fundamental question being debated here is this -- should she have been forced to follow a police officer's order or was she lawfully within her rights to remain on her front lawn?"

    Watch the YouTube video of the incident and see what you think. Does it matter to you that she was known to the police, having been arrested in March with a group of others who tried to block a home from foreclosure?

    493 comments

    This Supreme Court has turn the police into the Gestapo. If you are the police and are doing your job correctly, you should not fear a camera. If you are abusive as a police officer, the only "real" evidence for the average citizen is the camera. We are losing our battle with freedoms if we are syst …

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    Explore related topics: police, video, featured

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