"To Protect and to Serve" was the winner of a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February 1955 to determine what future motto to spray on their patrol cars. It has zero legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases, such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez, have shown.
"To Protect and to Serve" was the winner of a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February 1955 to determine what future motto to spray on their patrol cars. It has zero legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases, such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez, have shown
"To Protect and to Serve" was the winner of a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February 1955 to determine what future motto to spray on their squad cars. It has zero legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases, such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez, have shown
"To Protect and to Serve" was the winner of a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February 1955 to determine what future motto to spray on their squad cars. It has no legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases, such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez, have shown
"To Protect and to Serve" was the winner of a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February 1955 to determine what motto to spray on their squad cars. It has no legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases, such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez, have shown
"To Protect and to Serve" was the winner of a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February of 1955 to determine what motto to spray on their squad cars. It has no legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases, such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez, have shown
"To Protect and to Serve" was a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February of 1955 to determine what motto to spray on their squad cars. It has no legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases, such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez, have shown
"To Protect and to Serve" was a fucking magazine contest the LAPD ran in February of 1955 to determine what motto to spray on their squad cars. It has no legal or even moral basis, as numerous US Supreme Court cases such as Castle Rock v. Gonzalez has shown