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  • Creative Loafing Tampa Bay

    Indicted former Florida lawmaker says Tyreek Hill's experience with cops 'is not uncommon for a Black man'

    By News Service of Florida,

    11 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0E7z1m_0vVIGOqx00
    Former state Rep. Joe Harding.
    Former state Rep. Joe Harding expressed a new outlook on law enforcement as he posted online about the detention and handcuffing of Miami Dolphins star Tyreek Hill shortly before the team’s home opener on Sunday.

    Harding, R-Ocala, said in a post Tuesday on X that the encounter Hill had with law enforcement “is not uncommon for a Black man.”

    “My entire life I have been someone that has always respected and defended law enforcement,” Harding wrote. “Then my life changed. I came in contact with law enforcement. I saw what it was like to be intimidated and manipulated. I spent 3 months in Federal Prison, had many long conversations with men who had very different life stories than me.”


    “White people generally are conditioned and exposed to law enforcement on their own time and not during crisis,” Harding, who is white, continued. “Minorities, specifically black males, are exposed to law enforcement at a young age because of those around them having encounters with law enforcement and they have seen the ugly and corrupt side and know what it is like to look a crooked cop in the eye. Those same kids grow up to not trust law enforcement and I don’t blame them at all.”
    [content-1] In 2023, Harding pleaded guilty to charges of wire fraud, money laundering and making false statements related to a scheme to obtain pandemic-related business loans.

    Hill’s traffic-related arrest has drawn heavy national attention. Police suspended one officer, called for an internal investigation and released nearly two hours of body-camera footage.


    A state law that went into effect on July 1 (HB 601) prevents investigations of local law-enforcement officers by civilian review boards.

    A police union criticized Hill as “uncooperative.”

    DeSantis, who attended Sunday’s game, called an investigation “appropriate” when asked about the arrest Monday while in Miami.

    “But I think that I have confidence in agencies throughout this state that they want to uphold the highest standards of professionalism. And if for some reason that wasn’t followed here, I know that they will make that clear, but I’ll let that investigation take place,” DeSantis said.

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    Comments / 126
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    1424nupe
    38m ago
    Folks. Please keep color and or race out of this. The cops actions in my opinion were not racially motivated. The officers actions were influenced by Tyreeks non compliance. Any citizen of any ethnicity would have subjected themselves to the same actions of the officer.
    michael rogers
    1h ago
    it's not uncommon for a criminal......
    View all comments
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