Houston Tipping

Gern Blansten
Gern Blansten Mar-A-Lago Posts: 22,191


This is crazy. Tipping had been investigating a gang rape by four policemen. One of them was involved in the exercise that resulted in his death.
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2010: St Louis, Columbus, Noblesville; 2011: EV Chicago, East Troy, East Troy
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2016: Lexington, Wrigley #1; 2018: Wrigley, Wrigley, Boston, Boston
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Comments

  • Gern Blansten
    Gern Blansten Mar-A-Lago Posts: 22,191
    Remember the Thomas Nine !! (10/02/2018)
    The Golden Age is 2 months away. And guess what….. you’re gonna love it! (teskeinc 11.19.24)

    1998: Noblesville; 2003: Noblesville; 2009: EV Nashville, Chicago, Chicago
    2010: St Louis, Columbus, Noblesville; 2011: EV Chicago, East Troy, East Troy
    2013: London ON, Wrigley; 2014: Cincy, St Louis, Moline (NO CODE)
    2016: Lexington, Wrigley #1; 2018: Wrigley, Wrigley, Boston, Boston
    2020: Oakland, Oakland:  2021: EV Ohana, Ohana, Ohana, Ohana
    2022: Oakland, Oakland, Nashville, Louisville; 2023: Chicago, Chicago, Noblesville
    2024: Noblesville, Wrigley, Wrigley, Ohana, Ohana; 2025: Pitt1, Pitt2
  • Not surprising 

    gang culture with a badge. Plain and simple 
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,663
    Not surprising 

    gang culture with a badge. Plain and simple 
    That says it all.

    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • Merkin Baller
    Merkin Baller Posts: 12,788
    edited October 2022
    I’m sure there’ll be a significant response from the Blue Lives Matter crowd over this, right? 
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,831
    edited October 2022


    This is crazy. Tipping had been investigating a gang rape by four policemen. One of them was involved in the exercise that resulted in his death.
    If that's all true then its pretty crazy. I didn't see any of that mention in the article though. I Googled it and read 2 other articles, all I saw was that he took the initial report, didn't see anything about him being part of the investigation.  I assume taking the report doesn't;t mean he is the one investigating it, I would think that just means he takes the initial statement and passes it on to someone else. Especially if its a complaint about other cops, there'd be a special team for that. Where did you read he was also the investigator, other than the twitter post? All I heard in the audio was that he was someone connected to it, which could mean he took the report. Is there confirmation he was also investigating it? That seems like a big difference to me.
    Post edited by mace1229 on
  • mace1229 said:


    This is crazy. Tipping had been investigating a gang rape by four policemen. One of them was involved in the exercise that resulted in his death.
    If that's all true then its pretty crazy. I didn't see any of that mention in the article though. I Googled it and read 2 other articles, all I saw was that he took the initial report, didn't see anything about him being part of the investigation.  I assume taking the report doesn't;t mean he is the one investigating it, I would think that just means he takes the initial statement and passes it on to someone else. Especially if its a complaint about other cops, there'd be a special team for that. Where did you read he was also the investigator, other than the twitter post? All I heard in the audio was that he was someone connected to it, which could mean he took the report. Is there confirmation he was also investigating it? That seems like a big difference to me.
    But attorney Bradley Gage and Tipping’s family believe the officer was beaten to death, and that the department’s version of events doesn’t tell the entire story. During a Monday press conference, Gage said Tipping was actively investigating an alleged gang rape carried out by four members of the LAPD in July 2021, at least one of whom was present when Tipping died



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  • Gern Blansten
    Gern Blansten Mar-A-Lago Posts: 22,191
    Remember the Thomas Nine !! (10/02/2018)
    The Golden Age is 2 months away. And guess what….. you’re gonna love it! (teskeinc 11.19.24)

    1998: Noblesville; 2003: Noblesville; 2009: EV Nashville, Chicago, Chicago
    2010: St Louis, Columbus, Noblesville; 2011: EV Chicago, East Troy, East Troy
    2013: London ON, Wrigley; 2014: Cincy, St Louis, Moline (NO CODE)
    2016: Lexington, Wrigley #1; 2018: Wrigley, Wrigley, Boston, Boston
    2020: Oakland, Oakland:  2021: EV Ohana, Ohana, Ohana, Ohana
    2022: Oakland, Oakland, Nashville, Louisville; 2023: Chicago, Chicago, Noblesville
    2024: Noblesville, Wrigley, Wrigley, Ohana, Ohana; 2025: Pitt1, Pitt2
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,831
    edited October 2022
    This is one of those stories I'll have to wait until the details are confirmed. Looks like only the attorney is saying he was actively investigating. All other sources I read, which admittedly are not many, state he just took the initial report. There's a huge difference between actively investigating and taking an initial report a year ago and passing it on to the investigation team. The police chief seems to deny everything. I would think if there was an active investigation, that could be proven. 
    Also it doesn't make sense that the person who took the initial report is also the lead investigator. Or that they would still be working together and participate in training exercises together if one was investigating the other. Thats why all the other accounts make more sense to me and I'm waiting for confirmation on this story.
    Post edited by mace1229 on
  • Cropduster-80
    Cropduster-80 Posts: 2,034
    edited October 2022
    mace1229 said:
    This is one of those stories I'll have to wait until the details are confirmed. Looks like only the attorney is saying he was actively investigating. All other sources I read, which admittedly are not many, state he just took the initial report. There's a huge difference between actively investigating and taking an initial report a year ago and passing it on to the investigation team. The police chief seems to deny everything. I would think if there was an active investigation, that could be proven. 
    Also it doesn't make sense that the person who took the initial report is also the lead investigator. Or that they would still be working together and participate in training exercises together if one was investigating the other. Thats why all the other accounts make more sense to me and I'm waiting for confirmation on this story.
    Is there a problem in police culture? Yes
    do police punish other police for ratting on them? Yes
    Do good cops (there are a lot) know this and generally just keep their heads down? Yes 

    policing is like baseball.  There is a rule book, then there is an unwritten code.  You follow that code or you are in trouble.  


    You can need more information on this specific case, but you cannot deny the systemic issues in policing that this story points to

    if you personally know a cop, ask them. They will tell you.  The good ones all know it’s rotten but they absolutely won’t bring that up at work.  It’s an open secret 

    an internal affairs police officer is isolated/hated/actively uncooperated with way more than a corporate compliance employee at a civilian job. That says something right there. 
    Post edited by Cropduster-80 on
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,831
    mace1229 said:
    This is one of those stories I'll have to wait until the details are confirmed. Looks like only the attorney is saying he was actively investigating. All other sources I read, which admittedly are not many, state he just took the initial report. There's a huge difference between actively investigating and taking an initial report a year ago and passing it on to the investigation team. The police chief seems to deny everything. I would think if there was an active investigation, that could be proven. 
    Also it doesn't make sense that the person who took the initial report is also the lead investigator. Or that they would still be working together and participate in training exercises together if one was investigating the other. Thats why all the other accounts make more sense to me and I'm waiting for confirmation on this story.
    Is there a problem in police culture? Yes
    do police punish other police for ratting on them? Yes
    Do good cops (there are a lot) know this and generally just keep their heads down? Yes 

    policing is like baseball.  There is a rule book, then there is an unwritten code.  You follow that code or you are in trouble.  


    You can need more information on this specific case, but you cannot deny the systemic issues in policing that this story points to

    if you personally know a cop, ask them. They will tell you.  The good ones all know it’s rotten but they absolutely won’t bring that up at work.  It’s an open secret 

    an internal affairs police officer is isolated/hated/actively uncooperated with way more than a corporate compliance employee at a civilian job. That says something right there. 
    But this is straight out of The Shield. I'm not saying it can't happen, but the accusation in the headline was enough to read the article. It wasn't mentioned in the article, I read a couple more, none of them mentioned that he was actively investigating it either. I asked for clarity on where this information is coming from. Turns out the only person claiming that he was actively investigating it is the family's lawyer who is suing the department. 
    And it just raises questions about the accusations. I haven't seen anyone confirm the investigation. It wouldn't make sense to me he was the one investigating it for reasons already explained. To me this appears to be misinformation going around on twitter to claim as fact he was actively investigating a rape. 
    I just don't see anything to make me believe he straight up murdered a cop in front of 3 other cops due to an investigation he was taking part of.
    Yes there are unwritten rules. Yes police look out for each other. But there's a big leap to say cops will straight up work together and murder other cops in a conspiracy because of an investigation, that's a whole new level and I'm just not seeing evidence for here yet.
  • Bentleyspop
    Bentleyspop Craft Beer Brewery, Colorado Posts: 11,420
    I’m sure there’ll be a significant response from the Blue Lives Matter crowd over this, right? 
    They will blame Hunter Biden
    Or
    Hillary
    Or
    President Obama 
  • Cropduster-80
    Cropduster-80 Posts: 2,034
    edited October 2022
    I’m sure there’ll be a significant response from the Blue Lives Matter crowd over this, right? 
    “Those who enforce this code – the blue wall of silence – have stuffed dead rats and feces into fellow officers’ lockers. They’ve issued death threats, ignored requests for backup, threatened family members and planted drugs on the officers who reported misconduct.  

    Department leaders often condone these reprisals or pile on by launching internal investigations to discredit those who expose wrongdoing. Whistleblowers have been fired, jailed and in a least one case, forcibly admitted to a psychiatric ward. “

    I would imagine their “supporters” in the general public are ok with it as long as they police the communities they want them to police and keep the corruption from affecting their daily lives. 

    these are not isolated incidents.  It’s engrained in police culture 


    It goes on to say 


    In South Carolina, an officer leaked the fact that fellow deputies beat a prisoner who later died in custody. In Florida, a detective reported a captain who had impregnated a 16-year-old girl and then paid for the abortion. In Oregon, a sergeant complained that a co-worker bragged about killing an unarmed teenager.    

    After speaking out, all of them were forced out of their departments and were branded traitors by their fellow officers.    

    “Whistleblowing is a life sentence,” said a former undercover narcotics officer detective in Chicago who exposed a corruption scheme that has led to dozens of overturned convictions. “I’m an officer without a department. I lost my house, I lost my marriage. It affects you in ways you would never imagine.”    


    https://www.usatoday.com/story/story-series/2021/11/15/cops-risk-their-jobs-when-they-report-colleagues-misconduct/6355677001/
    Post edited by Cropduster-80 on
  • Merkin Baller
    Merkin Baller Posts: 12,788
    edited October 2022
    It's not as if the LAPD has a history of violence or intimidating the news media.   

    The chief has denied everything. 

    Case closed. 
  • Everything happens in a vacuum. No history of past transgressions to consider. And the cops and the DA? They tell the truth 100% of 100% of the time.
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  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,831
    I’m sure there’ll be a significant response from the Blue Lives Matter crowd over this, right? 
    “Those who enforce this code – the blue wall of silence – have stuffed dead rats and feces into fellow officers’ lockers. They’ve issued death threats, ignored requests for backup, threatened family members and planted drugs on the officers who reported misconduct.  

    Department leaders often condone these reprisals or pile on by launching internal investigations to discredit those who expose wrongdoing. Whistleblowers have been fired, jailed and in a least one case, forcibly admitted to a psychiatric ward. “

    I would imagine their “supporters” in the general public are ok with it as long as they police the communities they want them to police and keep the corruption from affecting their daily lives. 

    these are not isolated incidents.  It’s engrained in police culture 


    It goes on to say 


    In South Carolina, an officer leaked the fact that fellow deputies beat a prisoner who later died in custody. In Florida, a detective reported a captain who had impregnated a 16-year-old girl and then paid for the abortion. In Oregon, a sergeant complained that a co-worker bragged about killing an unarmed teenager.    

    After speaking out, all of them were forced out of their departments and were branded traitors by their fellow officers.    

    “Whistleblowing is a life sentence,” said a former undercover narcotics officer detective in Chicago who exposed a corruption scheme that has led to dozens of overturned convictions. “I’m an officer without a department. I lost my house, I lost my marriage. It affects you in ways you would never imagine.”    


    https://www.usatoday.com/story/story-series/2021/11/15/cops-risk-their-jobs-when-they-report-colleagues-misconduct/6355677001/
    I’m not saying it’s easy to be a whistleblower ina department.
    But as I see it, there’s 2 ways this went down.
    1) The cop that took the initial report was also part of the investigation. He continued to work closely with and train at least some of the deputies he was investigating. They were aware they were being investigated. One of those cops convinced 3 others who had nothing to do with the investigation to go along with beating him to death.
    2) He took the initial report. The report was passed on to the investigation team and he had no further involvement. This was an accident as reported by the coroner.

    Both I guess are possible, but option 2 seems much more likely. Especially when the only evidence for #1 is the word of a lawyer suing the department. I’ve seen nothing that suggests his involvement was beyond taking the initial report, other than the statement from the attorney. Seems unlikely the cop taking the initial report, who’s only been on a few years and is doing tactical trainings is also part of the internal investigation team. Just isn’t adding up to me. It’s not just 1 murderous cop in this story, he had to convince 3 others to go along with it and a coroner if I want to believe this.
  • mace1229 said:
    I’m sure there’ll be a significant response from the Blue Lives Matter crowd over this, right? 
    “Those who enforce this code – the blue wall of silence – have stuffed dead rats and feces into fellow officers’ lockers. They’ve issued death threats, ignored requests for backup, threatened family members and planted drugs on the officers who reported misconduct.  

    Department leaders often condone these reprisals or pile on by launching internal investigations to discredit those who expose wrongdoing. Whistleblowers have been fired, jailed and in a least one case, forcibly admitted to a psychiatric ward. “

    I would imagine their “supporters” in the general public are ok with it as long as they police the communities they want them to police and keep the corruption from affecting their daily lives. 

    these are not isolated incidents.  It’s engrained in police culture 


    It goes on to say 


    In South Carolina, an officer leaked the fact that fellow deputies beat a prisoner who later died in custody. In Florida, a detective reported a captain who had impregnated a 16-year-old girl and then paid for the abortion. In Oregon, a sergeant complained that a co-worker bragged about killing an unarmed teenager.    

    After speaking out, all of them were forced out of their departments and were branded traitors by their fellow officers.    

    “Whistleblowing is a life sentence,” said a former undercover narcotics officer detective in Chicago who exposed a corruption scheme that has led to dozens of overturned convictions. “I’m an officer without a department. I lost my house, I lost my marriage. It affects you in ways you would never imagine.”    


    https://www.usatoday.com/story/story-series/2021/11/15/cops-risk-their-jobs-when-they-report-colleagues-misconduct/6355677001/
    I’m not saying it’s easy to be a whistleblower ina department.
    But as I see it, there’s 2 ways this went down.
    1) The cop that took the initial report was also part of the investigation. He continued to work closely with and train at least some of the deputies he was investigating. They were aware they were being investigated. One of those cops convinced 3 others who had nothing to do with the investigation to go along with beating him to death.
    2) He took the initial report. The report was passed on to the investigation team and he had no further involvement. This was an accident as reported by the coroner.

    Both I guess are possible, but option 2 seems much more likely. Especially when the only evidence for #1 is the word of a lawyer suing the department. I’ve seen nothing that suggests his involvement was beyond taking the initial report, other than the statement from the attorney. Seems unlikely the cop taking the initial report, who’s only been on a few years and is doing tactical trainings is also part of the internal investigation team. Just isn’t adding up to me. It’s not just 1 murderous cop in this story, he had to convince 3 others to go along with it and a coroner if I want to believe this.
    It’s not four murderous cops. It’s four raping cops who have motive.
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  • Cropduster-80
    Cropduster-80 Posts: 2,034
    edited October 2022
    In any context why are they getting the benefit of the doubt here?

    cops will do whatever to protect themselves especially when getting caught means jail.
    if a cop has to choose between getting arrested and going after another cop the choice seems clear to me 

    It’s entirely plausible and probable that’s exactly what happened.

    did they try to murder him? Maybe not. That doesn’t mean intimidation or teaching him a lesson wasn’t the goal and he died 

    there is no situation where he could go after a cop and the cop ignores it and doesn’t get his buddies to do something about it. None. That doesn’t happen 

    the additional information you want from is going to be coming from the police department so hardly objective. They are investigating themselves 
    Post edited by Cropduster-80 on
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,831
    mace1229 said:
    I’m sure there’ll be a significant response from the Blue Lives Matter crowd over this, right? 
    “Those who enforce this code – the blue wall of silence – have stuffed dead rats and feces into fellow officers’ lockers. They’ve issued death threats, ignored requests for backup, threatened family members and planted drugs on the officers who reported misconduct.  

    Department leaders often condone these reprisals or pile on by launching internal investigations to discredit those who expose wrongdoing. Whistleblowers have been fired, jailed and in a least one case, forcibly admitted to a psychiatric ward. “

    I would imagine their “supporters” in the general public are ok with it as long as they police the communities they want them to police and keep the corruption from affecting their daily lives. 

    these are not isolated incidents.  It’s engrained in police culture 


    It goes on to say 


    In South Carolina, an officer leaked the fact that fellow deputies beat a prisoner who later died in custody. In Florida, a detective reported a captain who had impregnated a 16-year-old girl and then paid for the abortion. In Oregon, a sergeant complained that a co-worker bragged about killing an unarmed teenager.    

    After speaking out, all of them were forced out of their departments and were branded traitors by their fellow officers.    

    “Whistleblowing is a life sentence,” said a former undercover narcotics officer detective in Chicago who exposed a corruption scheme that has led to dozens of overturned convictions. “I’m an officer without a department. I lost my house, I lost my marriage. It affects you in ways you would never imagine.”    


    https://www.usatoday.com/story/story-series/2021/11/15/cops-risk-their-jobs-when-they-report-colleagues-misconduct/6355677001/
    I’m not saying it’s easy to be a whistleblower ina department.
    But as I see it, there’s 2 ways this went down.
    1) The cop that took the initial report was also part of the investigation. He continued to work closely with and train at least some of the deputies he was investigating. They were aware they were being investigated. One of those cops convinced 3 others who had nothing to do with the investigation to go along with beating him to death.
    2) He took the initial report. The report was passed on to the investigation team and he had no further involvement. This was an accident as reported by the coroner.

    Both I guess are possible, but option 2 seems much more likely. Especially when the only evidence for #1 is the word of a lawyer suing the department. I’ve seen nothing that suggests his involvement was beyond taking the initial report, other than the statement from the attorney. Seems unlikely the cop taking the initial report, who’s only been on a few years and is doing tactical trainings is also part of the internal investigation team. Just isn’t adding up to me. It’s not just 1 murderous cop in this story, he had to convince 3 others to go along with it and a coroner if I want to believe this.
    It’s not four murderous cops. It’s four raping cops who have motive.
    But didn’t it say they’re accusing the cop of beating the other one to death during a training exercise involving 4 cops? They all would have to be in on it to let him beat the other one to death. It wasn’t just the 2 of them.
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,831
    edited October 2022
    In any context why are they getting the benefit of the doubt here?

    cops will do whatever to protect themselves especially when getting caught means jail.
    if a cop has to choose between getting arrested and going after another cop the choice seems clear to me 

    It’s entirely plausible and probable that’s exactly what happened.

    did they try to murder him? Maybe not. That doesn’t mean intimidation or teaching him a lesson wasn’t the goal and he died 

    there is no situation where he could go after a cop and the cop ignores it and doesn’t get his buddies to do something about it. None. That doesn’t happen period 

    the additional information you want from is going to be coming from the police department so hardly objective. They are investigating themselves 
    Even if this is all true, you’re still missing a big hole in the story to me. From the 3 articles I read, they all said this cop took the initial report. Nothing about being part of the investigation. He wasn’t an internal investigation cop. Sounds like someone called it with a complaint, he took the statements and passed it on. I doubt he had anything to do with it after that. Doesn’t sound like he had any direct knowledge of the incident. So there would be no motive.
    The only person saying he was part of the investigation is the attorney. But that doesn’t make sense. You don’t call the police, file a report and have the same cop taking the report start the investigation. There’s a department for that. Especially for internal investigations.
    Its not adding up to me. And I’m not saying no cop would do this. But the majority aren’t willing to murder other cops.. 
    Post edited by mace1229 on
  • Cropduster-80
    Cropduster-80 Posts: 2,034
    edited October 2022
    mace1229 said:
    mace1229 said:
    I’m sure there’ll be a significant response from the Blue Lives Matter crowd over this, right? 
    “Those who enforce this code – the blue wall of silence – have stuffed dead rats and feces into fellow officers’ lockers. They’ve issued death threats, ignored requests for backup, threatened family members and planted drugs on the officers who reported misconduct.  

    Department leaders often condone these reprisals or pile on by launching internal investigations to discredit those who expose wrongdoing. Whistleblowers have been fired, jailed and in a least one case, forcibly admitted to a psychiatric ward. “

    I would imagine their “supporters” in the general public are ok with it as long as they police the communities they want them to police and keep the corruption from affecting their daily lives. 

    these are not isolated incidents.  It’s engrained in police culture 


    It goes on to say 


    In South Carolina, an officer leaked the fact that fellow deputies beat a prisoner who later died in custody. In Florida, a detective reported a captain who had impregnated a 16-year-old girl and then paid for the abortion. In Oregon, a sergeant complained that a co-worker bragged about killing an unarmed teenager.    

    After speaking out, all of them were forced out of their departments and were branded traitors by their fellow officers.    

    “Whistleblowing is a life sentence,” said a former undercover narcotics officer detective in Chicago who exposed a corruption scheme that has led to dozens of overturned convictions. “I’m an officer without a department. I lost my house, I lost my marriage. It affects you in ways you would never imagine.”    


    https://www.usatoday.com/story/story-series/2021/11/15/cops-risk-their-jobs-when-they-report-colleagues-misconduct/6355677001/
    I’m not saying it’s easy to be a whistleblower ina department.
    But as I see it, there’s 2 ways this went down.
    1) The cop that took the initial report was also part of the investigation. He continued to work closely with and train at least some of the deputies he was investigating. They were aware they were being investigated. One of those cops convinced 3 others who had nothing to do with the investigation to go along with beating him to death.
    2) He took the initial report. The report was passed on to the investigation team and he had no further involvement. This was an accident as reported by the coroner.

    Both I guess are possible, but option 2 seems much more likely. Especially when the only evidence for #1 is the word of a lawyer suing the department. I’ve seen nothing that suggests his involvement was beyond taking the initial report, other than the statement from the attorney. Seems unlikely the cop taking the initial report, who’s only been on a few years and is doing tactical trainings is also part of the internal investigation team. Just isn’t adding up to me. It’s not just 1 murderous cop in this story, he had to convince 3 others to go along with it and a coroner if I want to believe this.
    It’s not four murderous cops. It’s four raping cops who have motive.
    But didn’t it say they’re accusing the cop of beating the other one to death during a training exercise involving 4 cops? They all would have to be in on it to let him beat the other one to death. It wasn’t just the 2 of them.
    3 cops watched George Floyd being murdered. None of them stopped it. They didn’t kill him personally but they are certainly guilty of their roles.  The other cops there could be involved or could not be. They probably won’t talk anyway if they do it’ll be to back up whatever the cop who beat the other cop  says …. Because, look at the other guy 
    Post edited by Cropduster-80 on