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Nov 17, 2025

Abusive Cop SMIRKS After Punching Black Woman in Face, Shoving Black Bystander

Abusive Cop SMIRKS After Punching Black Woman in Face, Shoving Black Bystander
  • 9 minutes
New York cop smirks after punching a black woman. We have footage and we have updates. Here it is. [00:00:15] Your mom? Like that. I'm being detained for no reason. You can explain yourself after. Give me your hand. What you want me to grab? Get off me! Give me your hand or I'm gonna face you. [00:00:31] Give me your hand. You hit him. Yeah, I got him on record. I'm recording. I'm recording her. She hit you? Exactly. Why would you tell her? You gonna punch her? Her face punched her first. You punch me? You punched her first. He was. He was mad cause you stronger than him. You was very much stronger than him. [00:00:48] Yeah. Yeah. But just. But just do what you gotta do, sis. - Yeah, I punch you in your face, dumbass. - You hit me, you bitch ass! Please get out of my face! Get the Yo. Oh. Yeah. You need to chill out. [00:01:07] Who you are. You need to chill out. 93399. Right, I got him. I got him on camera. This little ass police officer. Cause he got a gun. [00:01:36] Put him up for a mask. Everybody is not afraid of you, sir. You are a coward in a uniform. [00:01:52] You lack integrity. You bring no respect to that office, to an office desperately needing it. New York Albany cop punches a black woman, shoved bystander. [00:02:09] Shirt up, decides to smirk afterwards. According to Atlanta Black Star, they did great reporting on this. A New York cop was captured on video punching a black woman in the face while straddling her, before shoving two men complaining about his abusive behavior. [00:02:28] They have constitutionally protected rights of speech, all while a random white male tried to stop another black woman from recording it all. The hell is going on? [00:02:44] Once again, that's a constitutionally protected right. The right to record in public. A public official publicly doing their publicly funded job. [00:03:00] The incident took place in Albany, Albany, New York, November 4th. But Albany police, they have refused to release that officer's name. Put officer back up. Somebody knows him. They have refused to release this officer's name or the woman's name, nor [00:03:19] any details as to what led to her arrest. The incident took place November 4th, but Albany police, they refused to release anything and no details as to her arrest whatsoever. Put this guy up to. This is the random white male. [00:03:35] Best picture we could screenshot a random white male wearing a Mickey mouse scarf. Then places himself in front of the camera, trying to block the woman from recording the cop's abusive actions. [00:03:55] Quote are you the police? The woman asked. Yeah, the man responds, but he looked more like a police apologist than an actual cop. More cops arrived to help with the arrest, as the random white man with the Mickey Mouse scarf steps in front of the woman's camera a second time [00:04:12] trying to keep her from recording. Well, get the f out of my face, the woman recording tells him, stepping away from him to continue recording the other woman's arrest. Sir, you're you're elderly. Somebody knows you. [00:04:28] And I would hope somebody tells you you gotta stop. Okay. That incident could have resulted in your harm. If somebody felt threatened to physically remove you from their presence, [00:04:45] you are also violating the rights of another citizen by blocking. Intentionally blocking a recording of a cop doing their job. They are not interfering with the investigation. And, sir, if the cop is morally, ethically, and legally executing [00:05:04] the office of the, of that institution, then they would want to be recorded because it eliminates any accusation that they engaged in malicious activity. The initial cop eventually stands up as the other cops are handcuffing the woman. [00:05:23] After getting to his feet, that cop shoves a man to the ground who had been sitting on the ground watching the arrest, but then stood up and walked up to him. The cop then shoved a black man a couple of times, who was complaining about the way he punched the woman, telling him to quote back the f off. [00:05:42] The cop is obviously pleased with himself as he smiled broadly at all the criticism coming his way, evidently knowing he would be protected by the top brass. Now to the top brass. He's smiling and smirking because he doesn't have to take the political hits like you do. [00:06:00] He's smiling and smirking because he knows that the rules that you all are governed by will protect him unless you leak the information. But you can still do. There's more. Albany police released the following statement. [00:06:16] The initial call that the officers were responding to was a fight call during the encounter. The individual involved resisted the officer's attempt to detain her, failed to comply with the officer's commands, and also bit the officer in the leg. The woman was subsequently taken into custody and charged with one count [00:06:34] of assault and one count of obstructing governmental administration, and one count of resisting arrest and one count of harassment second degree. All right. According to the video, the unnamed cop has the badge [00:06:53] number of three, nine, three. To the local media, you all should be able to figure that out. And belongs to the Albany Police Department, which is ran by this cat, Chief Brandon Cox. [00:07:08] So, chief, we have a game we play at indisputable when police departments play a particular game. When you play hide the pickle, we play show the leader. So your face will be front and center until we know who this guy is. [00:07:24] All right, all right. Fair enough. Michael. Thoughts here? Yeah. That's a I love that game. It works. It works pretty well. I mean, you know, there's so much here and and what's, what's you know I do this show occasionally. And what's so disheartening is that there's always when I get the [00:07:42] rundown for the show, a story like this. So that means it's not just happening on the days in frequent though they may be when I'm sitting in this chair. And the fact that policing has become so divisive that you [00:07:58] have somebody I mean, we're calling them random white guy, right? So he steps in front of the camera as if to protect what's going on. It's almost it isn't worse, but it's almost worse in the social discourse than what's happening on the ground to that woman. [00:08:15] Because you're you have people that are essentially supporting what is happening to that woman. And even if that woman were guilty of something, you know. Give me your hand or I will punch you in your F-ing face is not something that we want police officers to do at in any case, right? [00:08:34] We don't. These are, you know, little girls and little boys. Say, what do you want to be? I want to be a fireman. I want to be a police officer. I want to be a postman. All of these little innocent jobs. And then you see what's in front of you, and you see how they behave. And it's inexcusable. And Albany has a history of this as well. [00:08:53] There is precedent for it. But but for the moment, it's just so disheartening. And I think the most important thing is to not let these stories go. You say at the end of so many of your stories, we will keep you updated. These are the kinds of stories that need to be followed. [00:09:08] And that guy's picture has to be out and his name has to be out. The cover ups are incredible. There's a camera on them, and somehow they still think they're innocent of something. It's it's just it's gobsmacking, as they say. And that's right, that's right. That's why the greatest disinfectant, to corruption [00:09:25] is light information transparency.