Officer meets machete-wielding male running at her with a little more firepower, just-released bodycam video shows



The Houston Police Department last week released bodycam video showing officers pursuing and shooting a male armed with a machete on May 16.

Police received a call around 3:25 p.m. from a Family Dollar in the 5100 block of Almeda Road regarding a male who stole items from the store — and then threatened employees while brandishing a knife while on the way out, KPRC-TV reported.

'Stop! Put your hands up!'

The suspect was identified as 33-year-old Earnest Duke Harrison, the station said.

Officers encountered Harrison at the Southmore Boulevard bridge over Highway 288, KPRC said.

The department's video includes bodycam clips from three officers. The officers pursued the suspect from both ends of the bridge.

The officer closest to Harrison runs toward him while yelling, "Stop! Put your hands up!" But Harrison keeps running toward the officer while holding the machete aloft in his right hand.

RELATED: Trio of thugs wanted in beating death of lone victim at gas station. Video shows several people just watching attack happen.

Image source: Houston Police Department

The officer — whom police identified as Officer L. Jumonji — fired at Harrison and hit him, the station said.

RELATED: Crooks caught on video punching, pistol-whipping man in broad daylight near crowded park. Again, bystanders don't do a thing.

Image source: Houston Police Department

Video shows Harrison immediately collapsing on the bridge, after which he's disarmed and handcuffed.

RELATED: Home invasion victim fights armed burglar, then turns the tables on him — takes crook's gun away, shoots him dead with it

Image source: Houston Police Department

The officer who opened fire as well as other officers are seen on the bridge rendering aid to the suspect. After they roll the suspect on his back, one officer notices the suspect suffered a "gunshot in the head." By the end of the bodycam video, five officers are seen on the bridge.

Paramedics took Harrison to the hospital in critical condition, KPRC said, adding that the officer who shot the suspect was not hurt.

Doctors pronounced Harrison dead on May 20, the station said.

Police told KPRC that Officer Jumonji has been with the department since December 2021.

“As is customary in HPD officer-involved shooting incidents in the Houston city limits, this case is being investigated by the HPD Special Investigations Unit, the Internal Affairs Division, and the Harris County District Attorney’s Office,” police added to the station.

Blaze News on Monday asked an employee at the Family Dollar in question for comment about the robbery, but the employee said, "We're not able to talk about any of that," as the matter is "still under investigation."

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FACT CHECK: Video Doesn’t Provide Full Context To Police Stop

A video shared on X claims to show a police officer throwing a plastic bag into a motorist’s car. Can’t make this one up pic.twitter.com/w4RpwXUJ19 — CCTV IDIOTS (@cctvidiots) January 26, 2025 Verdict: Unsubstantiated The video shows the police officer throwing a plastic bag that was taken from one of the passengers, not the police officer […]

Police Release Bodycam Footage Of Arrest Of Alleged Would-Be Trump Assassin

Video shows officers placing Routh in handcuffs after stopping him on I-95

Grassley Releases Bodycam Showing Aftermath Of Trump Assassination Attempt, Demands Answers

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Screenshot-2024-07-24-at-11.39.13 AM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Screenshot-2024-07-24-at-11.39.13%5Cu202fAM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]Grassley demanded the Secret Service’s “operational security plan” with “locations and roles of all federal personnel” staffing Trump’s June 13 rally

Watch: Wild scene unfolds on busy Florida beach as suspected teen drug dealer pulls out gun, leads cops on chase into the ocean



Shocking police bodycam video shows officers chasing a suspected teen drug dealer brandishing a gun on a busy Florida beach during spring break.

Police bodycam footage shows a wild scene unfolding in New Smyrna Beach, Florida.

The beach was packed with spring breakers when suddenly a fight broke out around 3:45 p.m. on Thursday.

Deputies were directly in the area of the melee and bodycam footage caught the moment that the suspect pulled out a gun on the crowded beach.

An officer countered by wielding his firearm and ordering the gunman, "Hey motherf***er, drop the f***ing gun!"

The suspect disregarded the officer's demands and he sprinted away from the police. With multiple officers pursuing him, the suspect ran into the ocean. Half of a dozen cops stayed on the shore pointing their guns at the suspect, who stood in knee-deep ocean water.

The standoff lasted several minutes until the suspect surrendered to police.

The Volusia County Sheriff's Office said in a statement, "Deputies recovered both the gun and the bag from the water. The bag held 20 small plastic baggies of marijuana."

The suspect was identified as 16-year-old Felixander Solis-Guzman.

Police said Solis-Guzman was charged with three counts of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, possession of a firearm by a person under 18, improper exhibition of a firearm, commission of a 2nd-degree felony with a weapon, resisting a law enforcement officer, two counts of tampering with evidence, and sale of marijuana.

Solis-Guzman – who is from Lakeland – was also arrested on seven active no-bond warrants out of Orange County, including robbery with a firearm and violation of his probation.

The Office of the State Attorney announced on Friday that Solis-Guzman would be prosecuted as an adult.

State Attorney R.J. Larizza wrote on the X social media platform, "This 16-year-old brought drugs and a gun to Volusia County during Spring Break. He will now face adult charges and serious consequences for his reckless actions. We welcome Spring Breakers, so long as they behave themselves.”

Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said on Facebook, "We aren’t playing around in Volusia County. Don’t let your child be the next to come here as a juvenile and end up an adult facing serious criminal charges and years in prison."

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(WARNING: Explicit language)

Video shows teen pull gun in spring break crowd on Florida beach www.youtube.com


Liberal media and activists appear keen to gloss over critical detail about fatal police shooting of Leonard Cure in Georgia



A man was shot Monday by a sheriff's deputy in a traffic stop that went sideways in Camden County, Georgia. In the days since, there have been cries of "injustice" and accusations of racism.

The widespread presumption of police wrongdoing in the death of 53-year-old Leonard Allan Cure appears to have been driven, in part, by how the incident has been presented by the liberal media and other activist groups.

Footage of the incident, shared Wednesday by Camden County, reveals a critical detail has been downplayed or glossed over in the ascendant narrative: The deputy appears to have been in a fight for his life.

The incident

According to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, a Camden County deputy pulled over Cure around 7:30 a.m. on Oct. 16 for driving recklessly and speeding on Interstate 95. He had allegedly been going over 100 mph in a 70 mph zone.

Dash-camera footage shows a silver truck whipping down the highway and passing the deputy. The deputy, Staff Sgt. Buck Aldridge, turns on his lights, then follows the truck to the side of the road. Once the truck is stationary, the deputy approaches, ordering the driver to get out and to "put your hands back here," pointing to the rear of the truck.

"I ain't doing s***," replies Cure.

When the deputy reaches for Cure's right hand, Cure waves away the effort.

Upon the deputy identifying himself and citing his authority, Cure complies, placing his hands on the rear of the truck.

The two argue about the merits of the tentative speeding charge, and the deputy orders Cure to put his hands behind his back, ostensibly to proceed with an arrest.

Cure continues challenging the deputy, who responds, "You passed me doing 100 mph."

"Okay, so that's a speeding ticket, right?" says Cure.

"Sir, tickets in the state of Georgia are criminal offenses," says the deputy.

Cure notes, "I don't have a ticket in Georgia."

"You do now," Aldridge says.

The deputy once again tells Cure to put his hands behind his back. When Cure flouts the order, pointing to the sky, the deputy tases him.

After being tased, Cure starts flailing his arms, then charges the deputy. Both men grapple on the roadside. Cure tears off the deputy's glasses, gets an arm around one of his shoulders, and grips Aldridge's face.

As Cure puts his hand on the deputy's throat, the officer reaches for his baton; however, he is unable to land an impactful thwack.

Cure pushes the deputy's chin backward, arching the officer and turning his face purple, saying, "Yeah, b****! Yeah, b****!"

Finally, the deputy reaches for his sidearm and fires one shot into Cure.

Moments later, what appears to be a Brinks security truck races backward along the shoulder. One security guard rushes to the scene to provide the deputy backup. Additional first responders soon arrive and aid the deputy in providing first aid to Cure.

Despite EMTs' efforts, Cure later died.

Aldridge has since been put on leave, reported the Washington Post.

Camden County Sheriff's Office in GA released the Oct. 16 dashcam footage of the police shooting of the latest BLM martyr, Leonard Cure. He choked a deputy in the video. Cure was called a model citizen & spoke to school students about the justice system.
— Andy Ng\u00f4 \ud83c\udff3\ufe0f\u200d\ud83c\udf08 (@Andy Ng\u00f4 \ud83c\udff3\ufe0f\u200d\ud83c\udf08) 1697666977

The incident, according to the media and other liberal outfits

The Southern Poverty Law Center insinuated the shooting was racially motivated and failed to mention Cure had viciously attacked the officer.

SPLC president Margaret Huang said in a statement, "No one should be shot to death during a traffic stop. ... The brutal and unjust violence Black people have endured at the hands of police must end. Enough is enough."

"The SPLC once again calls for a reimagining of policing in this country that respects the rights of all people," continued Huang. "Leaders at every level must take urgent action to end the culture of anti-Blackness in policing, keep all communities safe and demand accountability until equal justice is a reality for all."

The ACLU of Florida wrote on X, "Leonard Cure was incarcerated for a crime he didn't commit for 16 years, before getting his life snatched from him by a cop. Modern policing is rooted in slavery, and rotten to the core."

When the footage of the incident was published, Reuters opened its report with, "Officials on Wednesday released video of the traffic stop and physical confrontation that ended with a sheriff deputy in Georgia shooting a Black man to death at point-blank range."

The report then underscored how Cure had been wrongfully convicted of a crime and ended up serving 16 years in prison before being exonerated in 2020.

The Guardian noted that he had initially received a life sentence because he had previous convictions for robbery and various other crimes.

While the Reuters report noted nine paragraphs down that Cure died after an altercation, it made no mention of the decedent first assaulting the officer after failing to comply.

CBS News similarly mentioned a "scuffle" in its eulogy but neglected to note how it started.

The leftist blog Democracy Now reported the incident thusly: "Leonard Allan Cure, a Black man, was driving on a highway in Camden County, near the Georgia-Florida state line, when a sheriff’s deputy pulled him over, reportedly for speeding. The officer notified Cure he’d be arrested, before shocking Cure with a Taser at least twice, beating him with a baton and then fatally shooting him."

The report emphasized Cure's previous innocence, but never once mentioned how he assaulted the officer.

NPR front-loaded its report with emphasis on Cure's exoneration, his race, and a quote from his family's lawyer, Ben Crump, claiming, "It is god awful that he would escape that injustice to have his life claimed by more bias. ... Just because you're Black should not be the determining factor whether you get a death sentence for a traffic stop."

One of Cure's brothers, Michael Cure, told reporters his brother "did turn and get a bit physical," adding, "There were possibly some issues going on, some mental issues with my brother. I know him quite well. The officer just triggered him, undoubtedly triggered him."

The Camden County Sheriff's Office noted that "it is common for rumors to occur, but blatant false information by some media representatives should not be tolerated.

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