The dirt bags in Edmonton's Police Service who illegally enter victims homes

Started by admin, 2025-03-21 07:30

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The dirt bags in Edmonton's Police Service who illegally enter victims homes during the night and sexually assault women and refuse to leave the premises after being told '20 times' to leave by the assault victim.
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And then have the EPS police union, the EPS police commission, police chief, EPS co-workers, MAGA Conservatives, Alberta's many cop-worshippers, et al circle the wagons around the dirt bag to protect him from the same laws that apply to everybody else. So is put on PAID administrative leave. All paid for by Edmonton taxpayers of course. Conservatives would be SCREAMING about 'soft on crime liberals letting crooks go' to Alberta's ubiquitous police-loving right wing corporate media if the same crimes were committed by any other member of the public. Especially if the suspect was a non-White person. Then the corporate media, the police, the local CBC News, the UCP, all the dregs of Alberta's conservative establishment would never shut up about it for six months, and the suspect wouldn't need to even have their charges proven in court before they're picture is splattered all over the front pages of Alberta's rancid corporate news media. BLUE CODE OF SILENCE: A phrase used to denote an informal code of silence among police officers not to report on a colleague's errors, misconduct, or crimes. If questioned about an incident of alleged misconduct involving another officer (e.g., during the course of an official inquiry), when following the code, the officer being questioned will perjure themselves by feigning ignorance of another officer's wrongdoing. ..... Edmonton Journal: "An Edmonton police officer has admitted to making sexual advances toward eight women he met on the job — including several victims of crime — in one case letting himself into an intoxicated woman's home and kissing her despite repeated demands he leave. "Const. Hunter Robinz, 39, pleaded guilty to a single count of breach of trust Monday in Edmonton Court of King's Bench, admitting he used his job as a police officer to meet women for his own "sexual gratification." "Robinz's activities spanned from March 2017 to June 2019, when he was a patrol officer. The investigation that led to criminal charges began in 2019, though he had been subject to previous probes by the EPS professional standards branch. "That August, a woman told police Robinz made sexual advances on her on June 29, 2019, after he and another officer drove her home. According to the agreed facts, the 24-year-old woman was "upset and intoxicated" in a public park after a night at a bar. Robinz and his partner insisted they take her home. On the way, they stopped at a McDonald's where the woman's roommates worked to borrow their keys. "Robinz returned later that evening and let himself in using the roommate's key. The woman was crying, and recalled him "getting close and putting his hands on her waist and trying to kiss her." She started yelling and pushing him away, but he refused until she insisted on using the bathroom. "The next day, Robinz sent the woman "sexually explicit" Facebook messages from his account, "Ranger Sparrow." "Police moved Robinz to an administrative role after the woman's complaint. "Other victims include: "- A woman Robinz met on a call while she was suicidal, with whom he struck up a relationship that included sexually explicit text messages. -A woman who reported a "prowler" on her property and later received an "unsolicited and inappropriate" text from Robinz. She reported the message in 2018, saying she was worried because Robinz contacted her on Snapchat, which led her to believe he accessed her personal information. -A domestic violence victim who met Robinz after she called police about her abuser breaching court conditions and allegedly sexually assaulting her. She later told a female EPS officer Robinz was her "current boyfriend" and showed her texts he sent. EPS launched a professional standards investigation during which Robinz admitted to knowing the woman but lied about meeting her on the job. "In a victim impact statement, the woman's mother described Robinz as "someone who should have been a hero, and not a monster wearing a hero's mask." "She said Robinz reminded her of her abusive stepfather, a Calgary police detective, who "would regale us proudly of the days when he was in uniform and the horrible things that he and his fellow officers would get away with." "You can't just tell someone Hunter doesn't represent all of the police force," she added. "Because how could anyone who worked with him not know what he was, when it became clear to us pretty quickly?" "