He Defended the NYPD in Court. Then They Arrested Him.

DonRe

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How does he deserve praise for it? :what: He chose a side, fukk him :camby:
I look at it as in the context of his role and in that space.

The law/police Union rules
allow these animals To have a defense attorney. Now its on the judge or jurors to do thier part. If that dont happen, then is it really on him?

We love to worry about the players and not the game.
 

Blankthawtz

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The Land of fukkery
draymond-green.gif
 

karim

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I look at it as in the context of his role and in that space.

The law/police Union rules
allow these animals To have a defense attorney. Now its on the judge or jurors to do thier part. If that dont happen, then is it really on him?

We love to worry about the players and not the game.
What's on him is that he chose to work for these people.
 

Kaydigi

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Don’t forget the One Piece demo for PS5 drops on 1/10/23
 
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Not only did this bozo go to work for an undeniably racist institution full of overtly racist cacs violating black peoples’ civil right, he went OD on defending them in court? Then was calling people idiots and being extremely condescending saying they’re too stupid to see he was helping them? Helping them how? :dahell:

fukk this dikkhead :pacspit::pacspit::pacspit:
 

Mashal88

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He's not being honest about not switching to Civil Rights law. He never wanted to do that because the pay was probably lower than the boring corporate cases he was dealing with for 9 years.

Nine years passed in the lower tiers of corporate law. Ashanti wanted autonomy, and he wanted to conduct trials — maybe even change lanes to civil-rights law. From an early age, he’d been inspired by Thurgood Marshall. But he didn’t have a civil-rights background, and the longer he spent doing corporate law, the less possible switching tracks felt. He started talking with a recruiter, and when an opportunity arose at Special Fed, Ashanti listened with great interest.

A recruiter who told him the opportunity to work defending cops who most likely commit abuses against the average person. But his recruiter couldn't get him a civil rights position. :mjpls:


He would have preferred to do civil-rights work on behalf of plaintiffs, but the firms that handled such cases weren’t offering him a job. Plus, for a native New Yorker, joining the Law Department had a special attraction. “Representing the City of New York did fill me with a sense of pride,” he says.
:childplease:
 
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