Bryan Mealing, Leslie Gaiter, Dontavion Jones, Gabriel Garner and the S squad – Lying cops violate multiple people at a park!

The civil rights butcher Case 22-223749

Richmond County Sheriff’s Office Augusta, Ga

The incident reports

The man that got to close to the cop car, charged with obstruction! Leslie Gaiter lied in this statement. Surprised? You shouldn’t be as this is common! The cops constantly lie in this reports to trick the media into telling you what THEY said happened! Gaiter said the man yelled at them, the man never raised his voice at all.

The clip I emailed to the AG, this is crazy and a MUST see video when complete!!

The second incident report about the man on the bike that was stopped and had his 4th amendment violated from the start! Gaiter again lied, nobody called. He is gaslighting the incident based on something that happened a day before, IF that even happened at all. Protect yourself folks, FILM THEM!! They will lie!!

Garner Gabriel looks on as his coworker immediately begins violating a man. Mealing conducts a search of the man with no probable cause that a crime has been committed.

🔹 What is a Terry Pat?

Terry pat (also called a Terry frisk) is a limited search that a police officer may perform during a Terry stop (an investigative detention) if they have reasonable suspicion that the person is armed and dangerous.

🔹 Key Points:

  • ✅ Reasonable suspicion — not probable cause — is enough to detain and frisk someone.
  • ✅ The frisk is limited to a pat-down of outer clothing to check for weapons only.
  • ❌ It is not a full search and cannot be used to look for drugs or other contraband unless the officer feels something identifiable as contraband (see Minnesota v. Dickerson, 508 U.S. 366 (1993), “plain feel” doctrine).
  • ❌ A frisk without specific suspicion that the person is armed violates the Fourth Amendment.

This is a very large an expansive case, the body cam is 2 hours from a hand full of cops, one being Dontavion Jones https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdga/pr/another-former-richmond-county-deputy-pleads-guilty-violating-civil-rights-jail

Dantavion Jones, 33, awaits sentencing after pleading guilty to an Information charging him with Deprivation of Civil Rights Under Color of Law. The guilty plea subjects Jones to a possible sentence of up to 10 years in federal prison, along with substantial fines and restitution, followed by up to three years of supervised release upon completion of any prison term. There is no parole in the federal system.

We will write him letters 😉

Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, U.S. Attorney Jill E. Steinberg for the Southern District of Georgia, and Acting Special Agent in Charge Sean Burke of the FBI Atlanta Field Office made the announcement.

As described in the plea agreement, Jones was a deputy with the Richmond County Sheriff’s Office and, with other personnel,  responded to Richmond County’s Charles D. Webster Detention Center on May 7, 2022, to secure inmates who had caused flooding in a section of the jail.

A pretrial detainee, referred to in court documents as Victim 1, “was handcuffed, face-down on the ground, and was not posing a threat to anyone” when another deputy shouted that the detainee wanted his handcuffs removed. A jailer attempted unsuccessfully to unlock the handcuffs, and Jones “then proceeded to unlock and remove the handcuffs from Victim 1.” Another deputy then repeatedly punched the detainee and placed him in a chokehold, while Jones “failed to intervene to stop or attempt to stop the assault.”

Two other former Sheriff’s Office staff members, former Corporal Daniel D’Aversa, 52, and former jailer Melissa Morello, 27, await sentencing after previously pleading guilty to Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law in the underlying case.

U.S. District Court Judge J. Randal Hall will schedule sentencing for Jones upon completion of a pre-sentence investigation by U.S. Probation Services.

The case is being investigated by the FBI, and prosecuted for the United States by Southern District of Georgia Assistant U.S. Attorney George J.C. Jacobs III and Anita T. Channapati of the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division. 

RCSO wages war on the homeless and wants the public to help!

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