WATCH: O/G Mad Swan Blood Member Reflects On Past Gang Life & Incarceration After A Murder Charge

Originally Posted on STREETGANGS.COM |

South Los Angeles – An O/G Mad Swan Blood member, Hakim, 38, reflects on his gang life style 7 past incarceration for murder. He talk about the lack of government assistance and the roles that fathers should play in young black males live’s. We caught up with Hakim at Freemont High School.

WATCH: A Brinks Truck Door Flies Open And Makes It Rain On Motorists On A Texas Freeway

rainingmoney

Imagine you’re minding your business riding and all of a sudden it starts raining…. money.

This wishful scenario happened to quite a few lucky dumbstruck motorists down in Texas when a Brinks money truck’s door flew open as it was traveling at highway speed down Interstate 20. The “money rain” created pure chaos and multiple fender benders on I-20 as motorists when into sheer pandemonium trying to “get to the money”.

Surprisingly, the truck rode for 7 miles leaving behind a trail of nothing but cold hard c-a-s-h.

Remind me to get behind Brinks on the highway


Via Cox Media Group National Content Desk:

At first, Joel Aldridge though the sudden reduction in speed on Interstate 20 in Texas was due to an accident.

But then he saw people stopping their cars and rushing to the side of the road. When a man passed by him with two handfuls of cash, Aldridge began filming the chaotic scene.

According to a statement from the Weatherford Police Department, the door of a Brinks Armored truck flew open while it was traveling on the highway.

A “substantial” amount of cash was lost over a 7-mile stretch of I-20.

Police officials want to remind everyone that “finders keepers” does not apply in this case.

According to the police statement, “Weatherford Police will investigate and potentially prosecute any individual that has picked up any of the loose money and not returned it to either Brinks or the Police Department.”

[See Also] Traffic comes to a halt as it starts raining MONEY in Kuwait: Cash worth more than half a million pounds blows through the city – and nobody knows where it came from

Should Police Wear Body Cameras?

policecam
Law enforcement critics see police body worn cameras as a solution for brutality.

How much do police body cameras cost?

Their presence has captured heroism from officers rescuing a baby from icy waters in Utah to carrying a child from a burning building in Georgia. (Video via Spanish Fork Police Department & Euronews / City of Griffin Police Department)

Their absence has led to questions. Like what was said in the moments before South Carolina police officer Michael Slager shot and killed Walter Scott earlier this month. Or what happened at all when Ferguson Officer Darren Wilson shot unarmed teen Michael Brown last August. (Video via The New York Times)

Police body-worn cameras are hailed by law enforcement critics as a solution for brutality and by many police officers themselves as a tool to prove the vast majority of men and women wearing badges do so professionally, and at times valiantly. But how much do they cost?

After all, a 2013 study conducted by the Police Executive Research Forum — or PERF — and supported by the Justice Department found that of the departments surveyed without body cameras, 39 percent cited cost as the primary reason.

One company VieVU advertises its police body cameras cost $199, plus $55 a month per camera for data storage. For a police department wanting 100 cameras, that comes out to about $86,000 in startup costs in the first year.

But that appears to be on the on the cheap side and only the beginning of costs. PERF found most of the police departments with body cameras reported buying them at $800-$1,200 each. (Video via RT)

Data storage takes up the bulk of police expenses. Departments have to decide a policy for how often their officers turn on the cameras, how long videos are kept and do they pay a third party provider to store the data? Or do they keep those operations in-house — often the more costly option because it requires purchasing more equipment and hiring additional people to administer the program and provide technical backup.

One police chief told the PERF study data storage costs “can be crippling.”

But certainly far less crippling than other law enforcement costs like fleets of police vehicles, which cost tens of thousands of dollars to purchase before paying for maintenance. And those are tools few, if any, police chiefs would argue their department could do without. (Video via General Motors)

Body camera manufacturers and proponents also point out the cameras can help avoid wasted expenses if a conviction is thrown out or a lawsuit is filed because of alleged police misconduct. (Video via Pro-Vision)

President Obama has proposed $75 million in funding over three years to help purchase 50,000 body cameras. The federal government would basically provide local police departments with a 50 percent match to buy the cameras and store data. (Video via WOOD)

And while startup funds are great, many police officials could argue it’s locking them into a much larger commitment. This is a piece of equipment those officials probably can’t cut from future budgets without enormous outrage from the community.

[Read More] WPXI.Com