Win / KotakuInAction2
KotakuInAction2
Communities Topics Log In Sign Up
Sign In
Hot
All Posts
Settings
All
Profile
Saved
Upvoted
Hidden
Messages

Your Communities

General
AskWin
Funny
Technology
Animals
Sports
Gaming
DIY
Health
Positive
Privacy
News
Changelogs

More Communities

frenworld
OhTwitter
MillionDollarExtreme
NoNewNormal
Ladies
Conspiracies
GreatAwakening
IP2Always
GameDev
ParallelSociety
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service
Content Policy
DEFAULT COMMUNITIES • All General AskWin Funny Technology Animals Sports Gaming DIY Health Positive Privacy
KotakuInAction2 The Official Gamergate Forum
hot new rising top

Sign In or Create an Account

149
George Floyd medical examiner changed autopsy results after meeting with the FBI (twitter.com)
posted 1 year ago by Ahaus667 1 year ago by Ahaus667 +149 / -0
41 comments share
41 comments share save hide report block hide replies
Comments (41)
sorted by:
▲ 67 ▼
– Smith1980 67 points 1 year ago +67 / -0

Chauvin deserves a pardon. He is literally a political prisoner

permalink save report block reply
▲ 38 ▼
– TheKidsAreAltRight 38 points 1 year ago +38 / -0

He deserves more than that, he's going to be hounded for the rest of his life by countless groups and individuals. He will need a completely new identity and set up for life because finding work that a) lasts, and b) isn't love bombed will be all but impossible.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 14 ▼
– Adamrises 14 points 1 year ago +14 / -0

What's funny is Chauvin absolutely deserves to be in prison for all the other bullshit he was up to prior.

But they put him in prison for the one time he was mostly acting like an actual police officer.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 7 ▼
– ApparentlyImAHeretic 7 points 1 year ago +7 / -0

what'd he do?

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 10 ▼
– Adamrises 10 points 1 year ago +10 / -0

If memory serves, and its impossible to find any useful fucking information anymore on the topic, it was just basic police corruption shit. Taking money to help or look the other way on drug running and other criminal enterprises in the area. The kind of problem that is unfortunately super common in any police department.

Which would be dismissable as just more slandering among the many about him, but part of that discussion was that he knew Floyd from that crowd and had some prior associations with him, though nothing deep. As acknowledging Floyd was that much of a criminal was anathema to anyone out to tar Chauvin, it holds some weight.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– Gizortnik 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Floyd's drug dealer was in the passenger seat. That's how Floyd got the speed balls. I bet you money that the Chauvin probably knew the dealer more than Floyd, but new Floyd's record, and thought "oh, these fuckers are up to no good."

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 4 ▼
– Crawmerex3 4 points 1 year ago +4 / -0

They had a Federal case cooking in the background incase the jury came to the wrong conclusion. Most of that was over tax fraud because Chauvin had a lifestyle well above his reported income.

There was also talk about how he was one of Klobuchar's pet cops when she was the DA in Minneapolis.

I saw a lot of Law people at the time saying he had every sign of being a dirty cop. He just happened to be innocent this time.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– DemolitionsPanda 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Not tax fraud. Chauvin failed to submit tax returns, for exactly the reason you suggest.

Chauvin was undoubtedly on the take, and he didn't submit tax returns to avoid leaving his bribes undeclared income. If you just don't file taxes, they can get you for a small fine. If you actually lie, you can do prison time.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– DemolitionsPanda 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

I guess after the pardon the President can unstab him too! Then give him his job back!

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 5 ▼
– Smith1980 5 points 1 year ago +5 / -0

Doubt he would want to be a cop again. I wouldn’t

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– deleted 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0
▲ 34 ▼
– current_horror 34 points 1 year ago +34 / -0

The Community Relations Service is a government agency under the Department of Justice. Created by the Obama administration, the CRS bills itself as “America’s peacemaker”. Their job - ostensibly - is to offer guidance to communities in the midst of heightened racial, ethnic, or religious strife. Anywhere that racial/religious tensions are threatening to boil over - typically in the wake of an inciting incident - CRS shows up to “advise” local police and news media responses (with an eye towards deescalation).

In reality, when blatantly anti-white violence threatens to trigger racial consciousness and solidarity in the local white population, CRS shows up to strong-arm the local news and authorities into aggressively retarded cover ups and wildly biased coverage. Ever wonder why local police press releases always downplay anti-white crimes to a psychotically absurd degree? That’s the hand of CRS firmly up the sheriff’s ass.

On the flip side, whenever a dindu suffers the predictable consequences of his or her own retarded actions, CRS suddenly and conveniently has no interest in their own mission to “foster racial harmony in the community”. It’s almost like the agency only exists to tamp down justifiable white anger in response to targeted anti-white violence…

permalink save report block reply
▲ 18 ▼
– XBX_X 18 points 1 year ago +18 / -0

The Community Relations Service is a government agency under the Department of Justice.

Sounds like another item on Elon's list of agencies to defund.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 8 ▼
– HallucinatoryBeing 8 points 1 year ago +8 / -0

Thank you for this post. I always forget the name of the agency, but not that it exists.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 7 ▼
– ernsithe 7 points 1 year ago +7 / -0

Created by the Obama administration

I have no doubt that Obama made the agency worse and weaponized it further, but it was Lyndon B. Johnson who signed off on that shit. Specifically it was Title X of the CRA:

TITLE X--ESTABLISHMENT OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS SERVICE SEC. 1001. (a) There is hereby established in and as a part of the Department of Commerce a Community Relations Service (hereinafter referred to as the "Service"), which shall be headed by a Director who shall be appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate for a term of four years. The Director is authorized to appoint, subject to the civil service laws and regulations, such other personnel as may be necessary to enable the Service to carry out its functions and duties, and to fix their compensation in accordance with the Classification Act of 1949, as amended. The Director is further authorized to procure services as authorized by section 15 of the Act of August 2, 1946 (60 Stat. 810; 5 U.S.C. 55(a)), but at rates for individuals not in excess of $75 per diem.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– current_horror 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

Thank you for the correction. It’s accurate, I think, to say that the agency was uniquely weaponized under Obama, but he didn’t found it. My bad.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– blyat56 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

DOGE it the fuck away

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– Gizortnik 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

America's Peacemaker

After establishment, the largest Race Riots since the MLK Riots in 1968

Did they get the concept of "peacemaker" from fucking Colt?

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 21 ▼
– RoulerBleu 21 points 1 year ago +21 / -0

Anyone with a brain, even the medical examiner, would have ruled ''Fentanyl overdose'' as the cause of death as Floyd had enough of it in his system to kill several people, and was complaining all along ''I can't breathe'' due to opioid overdose causing respiratory arrest.

Yet the medical examiner suddenly changed his opinion at some point.

Now we know he did so after the FBI ''visited'' him.

Reminder that the violent drug addict got a national funeral ceremony and was burried in a golden gasket. It was all an elaborate manipulation orchestrated to push Intersectional Race Marxism / White People Bad.

They made a Saint out of Fentanyl Floyd while gaslighting us.

permalink save report block reply
▲ 8 ▼
– Ahaus667 [S] 8 points 1 year ago +8 / -0

Excited delirium, it explains the entire video and his actions.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– Gizortnik 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

As sketchy as Excited Delirium appears to be on first glance, there's enough body-cam footage to so that, yeah, something happens to junkies when they get adrenalin, a tazer deployment, and wrestled to the ground. It shouldn't be enough to go into Cardiac Arrest, but we absolutely see it, and we can't rule out the drugs as a major contributing factor.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– Ahaus667 [S] 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

It’s basically your brain/body going berserk with adrenaline while the drugs you’re on cause altered dopamine and serotonin levels. Hyperthermia is common and cardiopulmonary death is always the result.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– Gizortnik 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

I feel like we also can't leave out the tazer. Delivering an electrical shock across your heart has to contribute to the problem too.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– Ahaus667 [S] 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

They’ve studied tazers excessively, ecgs at the very least don’t show any impact on healthy sober people. On a drug fueled guy however, who knows.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– Gizortnik 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Yeah, that's my concern. If we're sure that the drugs will fuck with the heart, 30,000 volts across it should fuck it up too.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– HOGCRU 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

not saying you're wrong, but since Eric Garner black people all yell I CANT BREATHE when they are being arrested regardless of their actual breathing situation

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– jvardrake 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

It’s not just that. It’s that our system is supposed to err on the side of letting even potentially guilty people go free, so long as there is reasonable doubt. This guy was loaded up with fentanyl (enough to kill), had a ton of blockage from cholesterol, and was even covid positive. On top of that, there was no sign of dumbass Chauvin having done any physical damage to this guy, and he used a move listed in their own goddamn manual. How, in the fuck, should there have not been reasonable doubt that Chauvin killed him? Seriously - the decision wasn't supposed to be whether you thought he did it. It's supposed to be, when looking at all the evidence, is it reasonable that he might not have? It’s so blatantly obvious their decision was political. There is zero fucking way anyone can look at all that, and think that the state didn't leave any reasonable doubt that he was guilty as chargecd.

Additionally, the case clearly should have been overturned as a mistrial based on all the following bullshit:

  • Minnesota decided to pay out around 30 million right before the trial, all but admitting guilt, and clouding the juror pool.
  • There was that juror that lied about being an activist, and then a bunch of pictures came out later of him wearing activist shirts like BLM, etc.
  • Activists leaving pig’s blood, and the head, at the door of one of the Chauvin’s expert witnesses, clearly attempting to intimidate, and influence the trial.
  • Biden running his mouth in an extremely public way, telling everyone what “the right verdict” was, and how he would be retried federally, if necessary, to get it (executive branch interfering with judicial...)
  • That raging asshole/racist Maxine Waters (congresswoman) giving press conferences all but demanding violent rioting if they didn’t get the verdict they wanted (legislative branch interfering with judicial...)

And so on, and so on...

Regardless of what sort of person Chauvin may/may not have been, this case was disgusting, and is a horrible stain on our system of justice. The left, and the media decided this case, NOT our laws.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– RoulerBleu 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

All great reminders of so much that was wrong with that trial.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– DemolitionsPanda 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Remember, Blackstone's Formulation came about as an alternative to what had gone before; which was that accusations had the same weight as evidence.

Trial by Ordeal, being put to The Question, etc. All assumed that accusations were not made without evidence, and the whole process of inquiry was a political decision.

Someone has accused you of being a witch! Let's tie you up with weights and see if you drown!

Blackstone's Formulation made a declaration as to what kind of society we should strive for, where trials are based on evidence and courts strive for justice rather than political expediency.

Well, it turns out that the Neo Marxists amongst us would greatly prefer that they were in charge, and they got to declare who was guilty of what at their whim.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– Benevolentdictator 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

The mechanism that opioids like Fentanyl kill addicts (and the opioid-naive) is through decreasing central nervous system respiratory drive and respiratory depression by decreasing the respiratory rate.

In general, this process is supposed to occur in a state of decreased level of consciousness.

I wonder how aware the addict is of this process if it were to occur while he's awake with the "I can't breathe!"

I don't have enough personal experience with the process to know one way or another.

But I would assume that the vast majority of overdose deaths occur without any awareness of the hypoxia on behalf of the subject.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– DemolitionsPanda 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Saint Floyd had a history of eating his stash so as to be diverted to hospital rather than jail for processing and charges.

He knew very well that respiratory distress ("I can't breathe") is a giant fucking red flag that causes cops to call an ambulance.

It worked really, really well. Saint Floyd had avoided arrest at least once with this tactic. It caused the rookie cops arresting him to stop putting him into the squad car and taking him to the station where there is a medical officer and Naloxone and instead follow SOP which was to call for an ambulance.

The ambulance was stopped because there was an angry mob waiting at the scene.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 14 ▼
– JamesBondNightfire 14 points 1 year ago +14 / -0

Free Derek Chauvin!

permalink save report block reply
▲ 4 ▼
– Filo76 4 points 1 year ago +4 / -0

Grounds for throwing out the conviction of Chauvin, is it not?

permalink save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– Gizortnik 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Officially, some but not all. Unless there is evidence that the FBI told her to change the conclusion, it's not really enough to throw it out on it's own.

There's still plenty of problems with the case.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 4 ▼
– bloodguard 4 points 1 year ago +4 / -0

FBI - Defund, disband and indict.

permalink save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– JustHereForTheSalmon 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

He testified in open court that he changed the autopsy report after seeing the video.

Which not only is already complete bullshit and should have gotten the whole report tossed, if not the case, but it turns out he perjured himself too.

permalink save report block reply
▲ 3 ▼
– Gizortnik 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

The FBI was involved in all of the race riots.

Including the one after Freddie Gray was shot, which lead to the attempted lynching of Kyle Rittenhouse. The incident was recorded by Drone footage that was introduced late at trial, and by a shadow company that only existed for a few months and apparently worked with the FBI.

permalink save report block reply
▲ 2 ▼
– realerfunction 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

so when was it falsified? before, or after?

permalink save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– LastRights 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

With just how heavily the FBI leans in favor of the Democrats. Probably after.

permalink parent save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– LinkR 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

I would not be surprised, but the tweet provides absolutely no smoking gun to even look at. Seriously, wtf. Am I just supposed to take it at face value?

permalink save report block reply
▲ 1 ▼
– deleted 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Original 8chan Links to Gamer Gate:

.

The main GG discussion is on the videogames board: https://8chan.moe/v/

.

GamerGate archive is at https://8chan.moe/gamergatehq/

.

GamerGate Wiki:

https://ggwiki.deepfreeze.it/index.php/Main_Page

. . . . . .

. . . . . .

Rules:

.

ONE: Do not advocate for illegal violence or post other illegal activity. (Be aware of your local laws.)

.

TWO: Don't threaten, harass, or impersonate users. Also: don't be a psycho. New users will be held to a higher standard.

.

THREE: Do not post porn.

.

FOUR: NSFW/NSFL content must be flaired NSFW.

.

FIVE: No vote manipulation. Do not break communities.win's features.

.

SIX: No spam or reposts. Do not make more than 5 threads a day.

.

SEVEN: Do not post falsehoods and hoaxes that are obvious to an uncontroversial degree.

. . . . . .

. . . . . .

Moderation Logs:

.

(Two different versions, Scored has more features and is cleaner, but .win let's you see a few more details in certain instances.)

  • Scored
  • .win

Moderators

  • DomitiusOfMassilia
  • C
  • BandageBandolier
  • CarmenOfSandiego
  • The_Shadow_of_Intent
  • SocraticMethod1
  • Kienan
  • Smith1980
Message the Moderators

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy

2026.02.01 - bh6wd (status)

Copyright © 2026.

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy