Thursday, July 23, 2015

Where does the victimization by the Texas law enforcement stop?

Where is the urine sample Sandra would have been required to provide when she was jailed? Specimens such as this are required of all arrested individuals. The point is that the victimization never stops. She had been in Texas for two days, maybe she was in Colorado on the way there. 

She was stopped for a lack of a right lane change signal, it was aggravated by the police officer to cause her to be upset because she was a law abiding person that never would expect an interaction with a police officer to result in assault and arrest and now a urine screen that would result in even more charges. 

This is ridiculous. Sandra should be alive. Her body has been given to the custody of the family. Texas has no more rights to conduct any tests or otherwise. What happened, the jail forget to get the urine drug screen? 

Sandra is not in this world anymore at the hand of their police officer who assaulted her and placed her into a reality out of hell. They have no right to build a case against Sandra when she isn't here to defend herself. I want to hear the charges Texas is bringing against their police officers and jail guards, there is at least assault, battery (when she was being man handled and negligent homicide.  

And this idea Sandra has a responsibility to cooperate with the officer is ridiculous. She was assaulted, man handled but basically battered and deprived of her freedom and everyone expects her to be rational when she thought she was going to die with a gun shot. Sandra did nothing wrong. She is an innocent person and the officer was way outside of appropriate with his words and demeanor. 

Sandra was not reacting to being 'found out' of a crime and attempting to get away from apprehension; she was scared for her life. She has no responsibility in this. Quite frankly any charges past those of her citation for neglecting to signal a lane change needs to be purged from Texas records. They are faux charges and are the responsibility of an officer that saw a chance to victimize an out of state woman for money and plenty of it.