Tagged: good cops, Police Corruption
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How To Deal With Corrupt Police Officers
William replied 6 days, 13 hours ago 20 Members · 39 Replies
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Can you tell us more about former NYPD Detective Nelson Yun, New York Attorney General Letitia James’ private bodyguard? Can you please tell us his comprehensive biography including age, education, work history, marital status, parents, siblings, sons and daughters, years of service, current law enforcement status, and the whole heap of trouble he is in and potential liability he is facing including federal civil rights violation, potential crime he has committed, charges he is facing, and potential jail time and fines he is facing? Alex Carlucci, an associate contributing editor at Great Community Authority Forums, powered by Gustan Cho Associates, says he is of South Korean descent and has a history of disciplinary actions from law enforcement agencies for which he has worked. I really appreciate any help you can provide.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRCTeF8pyFU
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This reply was modified 3 months, 1 week ago by
Sapna Sharma.
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This reply was modified 3 months, 1 week ago by
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Retired NYPD detective Nelson Yu walks a few paces ahead of New York Attorney General Letitia James, part of the quiet detail keeping her safe.
Background & Identity
Name: Nelson Yu.
Descent: South Korean heritage, according to public safety expert Alex Carlucci.
Age / Education: Exact birth year and school transcripts remain frozen.
His LinkedIn snapshot claims over 20 years on the force, yet it skims over college names and specialty classes.
Law-Enforcement Career: NYPD Tenure:
- I spent two-plus decades on patrol, in the precinct, and along the crime scene tape.
- Career breaks and unit transfers are mostly sealed, leaving a blank spot for promotions and headline cases.
- A handful of NYPD internal memos hint at friction, though none of those notes flag formal discipline.
Post-NYPD Role:
- Shields the attorney general in a civilian post, trading badge authority for bodyguard duty.
- While he still reads threats like a beat cop, the oath went inactive the day the shield was retired.
Personal Life
- Most people online hit a brick wall when they look for details about Yu.
- His marital status, birthday, and information about parents or kids are not part of the public script.
Current Incident & Legal Implications
- On June 18, 2025, Yu got into a fender bender with a woman after a brush between her hatchback and the armored SUV that taxis him around.
- She had no visible driver’s license, but the stop unraveled quickly.
- He let the handcuffs click open, and a traffic court ticket landed on her windshield instead.
Legal ExposureExceeding Authority
- Yu wears a badge of private security, not the gold star of a sworn cop.
- Slapping cuffs on someone may check the box for false arrest and imprisonment.
Federal Civil Rights Laws
- Under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Uncle Sam could stack liability on your desk if you act “under color of law” and yank away a citizen’s rights.
- His chain of command or paycheck won’t drown that claim.
State Charges
- Unlawful restraint or the same false-imprisonment label.
- Possible assault or battery; even a simple cuff counts as a force.
- If he flashed a badge or claimed police rank, impersonation was waiting in the wings.
Civil Lawsuits
- The driver can still file a suit for damages.
- Accusations of wrongful hold, emotional whiplash, and violation of constitutional grounds can all headline her complaint.
Internal & Professional Consequences
- The Attorney General’s office is already investigating what happened, trying to piece the story together behind closed doors.
- If the investigators decide he overstepped, the badge could be yanked, and his private security cards would accompany it.
Potential Penalties
- Criminal charges: Mess with the law directly, and you might wind up paying hefty fines, doing a stretch of probation, or even for bigger slips like false imprisonment, spending real time in a county lockup.
- Federal civil-rights violations: Jumping into federal court, a jury thinks you crossed the line. The money part can get huge, though a federal felony rap on the books is rare.
- Straight civil suit: A person you arrested yesterday might sue you tomorrow.
- Jurors sometimes hand out eye-popping damage awards to make a point.
- Job fallout: If you get suspended today, it can stain your record forever, meaning the next squad that looks at your file probably passes without even calling you.
Summary of Known Information
- Age, school background, and family life remain hush-hush. Nobody has put that info on the record yet.
- My career up to now reads like this.
- More than 20 years in the NYPD, chasing bad guys, then switching to private protection for the AG.
- Talk of earlier complaints is floating around, yet no one has released paper proof to back the rumors.
- Today, he faces possible civil suits, criminal charges, and an internal review that could make or break the rest of his career.
Key Unknowns & Next Steps
- Actual legal papers have not hit the court clerk so far.
- Everyone is still in the talking-and-writing stage.
- Files that might list past discipline are sealed or simply missing, leaving that chapter blank in most public searches.
- Little is known about his life outside work, hometown, spouse, and kids—none have yet leaked into the news cycle.
- Nelson Yu is now staring down some heavy trouble at work and possibly in a courthouse.
- People keep asking whether the attorney general’s team or city prosecutors will charge him with false imprisonment or civil rights violations.
- That question could dictate the next few chapters of this story.
Watching all this, you can’t help but wonder where the bright line sits between guarding a public official and acting like someone who wears an actual badge. The security folks in Yu’s line of work have fewer powers than the police, yet they often move as if those powers are already theirs.
If you want updates as lawsuits or indictments arise or are just curious about what New York statutes or federal rules might be involved, shoot me a note.
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Here is the story of Indiana Sheriff Jamey Noel:
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THE MOST CORRUPT POLICE SHERIFFS Convicted Of Heinous Crimes
Not every sheriff sworn to protect their community lived up to the badge. In this shocking video, we expose the darkest cases of police sheriffs across the United States who abused their power, crossed the line, and were ultimately convicted of heinous crimes. From corruption and abuse to murder and cover-ups, these are the sheriffs who turned from law enforcers into lawbreakers.
Discover how their scandals unfolded, the trials that rocked their counties, and the following prison sentences. These stories reveal the devastating consequences of unchecked power and why accountability in law enforcement matters more than ever.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0U4eSSNgnA
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This reply was modified 8 months ago by
Doc.
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This reply was modified 8 months ago by
Sapna Sharma.
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This reply was modified 8 months ago by
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On August 22, 2016, the Hapeville Police Department received a chilling 911 call. A social worker had discovered a horrific crime scene at a local garbage site. When the police arrived, they quickly realized the crime had been committed by a professional. Little did they know, this professional would turn out to be one of their own.
Elm Street in Hapeville, Georgia, is a remote, isolated road to nowhere. At the end of the street sits a wooded lot where many locals dump their garbage and lawn clippings. But on August 22, 2024, this unsuspecting public works employee found the shock of his life.
When Sergeant James Carroll arrived, what sat before him in the grass, thrown aside like a piece of trash, was the charred body of a young woman. When he leaned close to inspect her body, he could still see the last flickers of a flame burning out on the end of her fingertip.
She had been shot four times, burned with gasoline, and dumped out with the local trash. Because of the charred state of her remains, the only evidence that was left on the scene was a single 40-caliber winchester casing. Only one casing for the four shots that marred her body, including two shots in her head, one in her ear, and a final defensive wound on her forearm–from where she held her arm up over her face to protect herself.
Tragically, police had no insight into who this poor woman was or how she ended up on this dead-end street. Whoever had murdered her took her identification and phone. The only thing officers had to identify her with was a small heart-shaped tattoo, what remained of the clothing she was wearing… and a locket with a photo of the victim’s child. They knew there had to be family missing her, and soon, they discovered who.
Two days after the body was found, a woman called Atlanta Police Department to report her daughter, Vernicia Woodard missing. She hadn’t heard from her since Friday – the same day that the body was found.
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When Joshua Emanuel was pulled over on his way to work in Jackson County Florida he thought he had nothing to hide. He trusted the process and the man in the uniform. That trust vanished the moment Deputy Zachary Wester reached into a center console and pulled out a syringe of methamphetamine that Joshua had never seen before. This story explores a terrifying breach of power where a law enforcement officer used his authority to frame dozens of innocent motorists.
Florida Sheriff’s Deputy Zachary Wester systematically abused his power by planting methamphetamine on innocent motorists during traffic stops to artificially inflate his arrest numbers, leading to over 100 wrongful prosecutions before he was caught and sentenced to 12 years in prison.
https://youtu.be/JppcNFTjQ5Y?si=EfsI94bYR_HnViZt
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This reply was modified 3 months, 1 week ago by
Gunner.
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This reply was modified 4 weeks, 1 day ago by
Sapna Sharma.
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This reply was modified 3 months, 1 week ago by
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These are some moments when corrupt cops got caught red handed! Make sure to drop a like and comment below if you enjoyed! If you enjoyed make sure to leave a like and let me know your thoughts on the video below in the comments.
This content is for educational and informational purposes only. We do not promote harm, hate, copyright infringement, or policy violations. If any issue is found, we’re open to reviewing and correcting.
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Around 12:52 AM on December 28, 2025, Sergeant Dustin Widas with the Margate City Police Department responded to a report of motor vehicle accident in front of Tomatoe’s (9300 Amherst Avenue). He spoke with the bouncers, who confirmed that a female had gotten behind the wheel of a white 2024 Porsche Macan and backed into a white 2024 Buick Envista. The driver was identified as Allison Seigel, who is a practicing dentist.
Allison offered conflicting accounts of who was driving the Porsche, before eventually admitting that she drove the vehicle. As he was speaking with Allison, he observed indicators of impairment. Allison admitted to consuming alcohol prior to operating a motor vehicle. Based on his suspicion of impairment, Allison was asked to perform field sobriety exercises. Her poor performance on the field sobriety exercises confirmed the officers’ suspicions of impairment.
Based on the motor vehicle crash, her admission to consuming alcohol earlier that evening, and her inability to satisfactorily complete the field sobriety exercises, Allison was placed under arrest for DWI. Her vehicle was impounded by Providence Towing for a 12-hour hold according to John’s Law. Officer Hankinson transported Allison to the Margate City Police Department for further processing.
At the station, the Standard Statement for Motor Vehicle Operators was read to her, but she refused to submit breath samples. She later mentioned that she made half a million dollars a year as a dentist and that her vehicle was worth $70,000. After they finished processing her, Allison was eventually released to Francis Terry pending her court appearance after he signed the Potential Liability Warning form on Allison’s behalf.
Officer Hankinson issued Allison the following traffic tickets:
-Operating under the influence
-Refusal to submit to chemical test-Reckless driving
Court records indicate that on April 13, 2026, Allison pleaded guilty to operating under the influence. As a result of her conviction, Allison had to spend 12 hours at an intoxicated driver resource center, use an ignition interlock device for 3 months, and pay a total of $640 in fines. The other 2 citations were dismissed as part of it.
The New Jersey Supreme Court has previously affirmed in Salzano v. North Jersey Media Group, 993 A.2d 778 (2010) that “The fair-report privilege reflects the judgment that the need, in a self-governing society, for free-flowing information about matters of public interest outweighs concerns over the uncompensated injury to a person’s reputation.” This video advances a compelling public interest. The summary of events was based on records that are “open to public view through open access to public records” as defined in the Salzano case. In Ramos v. Flowers, 429 N.J. Super. 13, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court has also affirmed the right to film law enforcement interactions.
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