Re-posted by Nicholas Stix
Thanks to A Texas Reader, who writes,
Wasn't she "profiled" when the university hired her?
Pretty thin C.V. for a professor.
“Don’t talk to me like that. This entire thing has been about your lack of respect.”
Ersula Ore lecturing ASU police officer Stewart Ferrin, as she resists arrest.
To extend on ATR’s remark, she’s gotten a free ride her entire life, and been able to spit on the rules and laws that whites have to follow. She might even have deliberately walked down the middle of the street, just to provoke an incident with police, and it may not have been her first attempt.
Note how she tried to spin her behavior, including her treating the cop as if he were her slave, and the alleged reporter’s attempt to act as her PR rep.
Cops used to oppose these videocams, but they’ve turned out to be a net win. Not that they help with blacks, 90% of whom could care less about the facts, but they are essential for fair-minded non-blacks, who might otherwise get conned into believing racist black thugs like …..
The more I look at this fabricated story, the more it looks like Ersula Ore went looking for a fight with a white cop, in order to shake down her employer to the tune of millions of dollars. An alternative explanation is that she routinely violates rules and laws, but almost always gets away with it, because no one wants to tangle with an out-of-control, racist black woman, since they know that there are all sorts of racist opportunists of all colors who will jump at the chance to support racism, and hang the good guy out to dry, while other whites will do nothing on his behalf. However, even if the alternative explanation holds, a racist black thug like Ersula Ore always has the ghetto lottery/race hoax plan ready in the back of her mind.
While Ore should go to jail, lose her job, and be unemployable, if anything, she will get a promotion out of this, awards, and is already a national celebrity. Meanwhile, the white cops who merely did their jobs will surely have to leave ASU, even after being cleared, since Ore's allies will surely now criminally conspire to make their lives hell.
Arizona Professor’s Jaywalking Arrest Quickly Gets Out of Hand
By CNN Wire
[Accomplice: CNN’s Mesrop Najarian.]
June 30, 2014, 2:13 AM
Updated at 06:59 p.m., June 30, 2014
KTLA
A jaywalking rarely makes national news, but the arrest of Arizona professor Ersula Ore has done just that.
[The “jaywalking” didn’t make “national news.” Rather, the leftwing, national MSM are trying to help a racist, black criminal collect a ghetto lottery against a couple of white cops who were merely doing their duty.]
What began as a walk home from classes at Arizona State University ended with police charging the professor with assault.
The English professor was walking in the middle of a Tempe, Arizona, street one evening last month when a campus police officer stopped her. The incident escalated, and she was handcuffed and landed on the pavement.
Appearing Monday on CNN’s “New Day,” Ore was asked about her own words and actions in the incident and replied, “I think I did what I was supposed to do. I was respectful. I asked for clarification. I asked to be treated with respect, and that was it.”
[She’s a bald-faced liar. She tried to order the cop around. She did the absolute opposite of what she is supposed to do. Racist, incompetent blacks like her are hired as “role models,” they “role model” criminal behavior.]
In a dashboard camera recording released Friday, Ore steadfastly questions officer Stewart Ferrin and asks him to be respectful.
[Liar! She steadfastly defies Officer Ferrin, and showers him with disrespect.]
The two talk over each other as the situation escalates, with Ferrin threatening to arrest Ore unless she produces her ID.
“If you don’t understand the law, I’m explaining the law to you,” the officer says. “The reason I’m talking to you right now is because you are walking in the middle of the street.”
Ore explains that she walked in the street to avoid construction.
“I never once saw a single solitary individual get pulled over by a cop for walking across a street on a campus, in a campus location,” she says.
The explanation does not satisfy, and Ferrin begins to cuff the [offender] professor.
“Don’t touch me,” Ore says, her voice beginning to rise. “Get your hands off me.”
[The legal term for this action, which the “reporter” refused to provide, is “resisting arrest.”]
The officer warns her to put her hands behind her back, or “I’m going to slam you” on the police car.
“You really want to do that?” Ore asks. “Do you see what I’m wearing?”
[Apparently, there is a new state law in Arizona that forbids policemen form arresting skirt-wearing, black female offenders. Note that the “reporter” fails to mention that Ore violently fought the policemen.]
Ferrin responds, “I don’t care what you’re wearing.” She kicks the officer.
Shortly, Ore is on the ground. Her lawyer, Alane M. Roby, says the action caused her dress to ride up, “exposing her anatomy to all onlookers.”
[That’s all her fault! If she’d complied with the officer’s commands, none of this would have happened.]
Ore faces charges of assaulting a police officer, resisting arrest, failing to provide ID and obstructing a public thoroughfare. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for Thursday.
The university said it found “no evidence of inappropriate actions by the ASUPD officers involved.”
Given the “underlying criminal charges,” the university declined to provide any more details.
Monday on “New Day,” Ore said the incident started when the officer stopped his car next to her and asked whether she knew the difference between a road and a sidewalk.
She said she asked him, “Do you always accost women in the middle of the road and speak to them with such disrespect and so rudely as you did to me?”
[That’s total disrespect on her part, which she then projects onto the cop.]
She said that at no point did he ask her name or tell her why she was being questioned.
“He throws the car door open actually, is what happens, and he’s towering over me,” she said. “He’s intimidating. I don’t know why he’s so aggressive.”
["He throws the car door open"? How does one "Throw [the] car door open"? Oh, she means, "He opened the car door," as if that were a violent crime. Note that she looked plenty big, acted plenty violent, and clearly was not intimidated in the slightest. She’s simply reading the script her lawyer prepared for her.]
Roby said they’ll fight the charges and accused the officer of escalating the situation in violation of his training.
“Professor Ore’s one crime that evening was to demand respect that she deserves as a productive, educated and tax paying member of society,” Roby said in a statement to CNN, adding that they maintain any actions Ore took were in self-defense.
That includes the caught-on-camera kick she delivered to the officer’s shin.
“She can clearly be heard on the dash can video instructing the officer not to grab toward her genital area prior to him reaching for her in attempt to pull her skirt down over her exposed private area,” Roby wrote.
[Bald-faced lies. The cop did no such thing. She fought him, and he arrested her, based solely on her criminal actions.]
When asked on “New Day” about kicking the officer, Ore said she’d been advised by her lawyer not to comment.
The incident has made headlines as far away as Iran and England. Closer to home, her department at the university has asked for a thorough investigation, including “an audit on the conduct of its police force vis-a-vis racial profiling.”
[I.e., her department supports violent black criminals against the police.]
The university said it has completed one investigation. If evidence of officer wrongdoing surfaces, it said, an additional inquiry will be conducted and appropriate measures taken.
[Reading through the newspeak, that means that the university found that the officers conducted themselves properly, but either the university or the racial socialist operatives guilty of this “report,” refuse to tell the reader that. P.S. I have since determined that it was the racial socialist media operatives who misled readers; ASU clearly stated that it found that the officers had done nothing wrong, but that if someone can show evidence to the contrary, it will re-open the investigation.]
CNN’s Mesrop Najarian contributed to this report.
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