Tucson Cop Leaves Photographer Hospitalized after Claiming he was Blinded by FlashBy Carlos MillerPINAC Sep. 19, 2014 |
Ultra-Vaxxed Israel Now Has Highest CV Case Rate In The World; Sweden Bans Travelers From Israel
DHS: White Americans Support The Taliban And Are Poised to Carry Out Terror Attacks At Any Moment
Fauci Suggests Americans Will Need To Be Triple-Vaxxed To Be Considered 'Fully Vaccinated'
CDC Admits Vaccine Effectiveness Against Hospitalizations is Falling
Japan Halts 2.6m Moderna Doses After Additional Vials Found to Contain 'Foreign Substances,' 2 Men Die
![]() With more than two decades of police experience under his belt, you would think Tucson police officer Bobby Nielsen would be able to conduct his job without being distracted by a mere camera flash. Especially when he’s shining a powerful flashing into the photographer’s lenses. But then again, with more than two decades of police experience, Nielsen has learned to manipulate the truth to his advantage, which is what he tried to do last week when snatching two cameras out of a man’s hands after claiming he was blinded by the flash. The incident left Raymond Rodden hospitalized with a whiplash injury to his neck, an official diagnosis of cervical radiculopathy, a result of Nielsen yanking the camera so hard that the camera strap left him with a herniated disc. Read More |