COP UN-ALIVES MCDONALD’S WORKER IN HIS OWN HOME!



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49 thoughts on “COP UN-ALIVES MCDONALD’S WORKER IN HIS OWN HOME!”

  1. Tbh, what should be done is simple.
    1. Make it harder to be a police officer and get more funding not for equipment but for actually training and proper examination
    2. Have a whole new body for enforcing cops and be a sub branch of the DoJ for cops.
    3. Not have municipal stations but instead be the whole state department being stationed in the state. Divide the city stations into different Sub Units that respond to different needs.

  2. I don't know what the law is there but where I live it's illegal to lie to the cops. That's why they came after him. BUT they can't cross the threshold into their home without a warrant. IF you know it's the cops, and they breach the door, DO NOT BRANDISH A GUN OR SHOOT AT THE COPS. You comply with the cops' instructions and wait til court throws out charges due to illegal search. It doesn't matter if the cops found a whole meth lab. It's still fruit from the poison tree 😐

  3. "A special prosecutor has determined Thermopolis Police Sgt. Mike Mascorro illegally broke into a suspect's home in April, causing a fatal shootout, but a provision for police officers in Wyoming's self-defense law protects him from criminal charges."

  4. The town of Thermopolis released body camera video Wednesday of the fatal shootout between a local police sergeant and a resident last April when the officer broke into the resident’s home to confront him.

    The video has been edited, condensed and narrated to explain the officer’s and suspect’s actions.

    Because of conflicting portions of Wyoming self-defense law, Thermopolis Police Sgt. Mike Mascorro was not charged for shooting 33-year-old Buck Laramore to death in Laramore’s home.

    Mascorro entered Laramore’s home illegally and without a warrant, according to a special prosecutor’s summary of the incident.

    Laramore then shot and wounded Mascorro, who shot back, killing Laramore at the scene.

    Mascorro was hospitalized for days. He returned to Thermopolis to a hero’s welcome May 3, 2023, five days after the shootout.

    What It Shows
    Following a Cowboy State Daily request for Mascorro's body camera video from the entire day of April 28, 2023, Thermopolis town leaders dispatched a stitched-together, captioned and narrated 10-minute version of the original footage.

    The video shows Mascorro investigating a report of methamphetamine distribution at the local McDonald’s on the morning of April 28, 2023.

    Mascorro brought along Hot Springs County Deputy Shayna Cox and her K-9 drug-detection dog.

    Laramore, a McDonald’s employee, made a “beeline” to the men’s bathroom, according to an interview one witness later gave to the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation.

    Mascorro is concerned about that in the video.

    “So, this dude, that’s right there behind the — this big guy,” begins Mascorro, gesturing toward Laramore while speaking to Cox. “He took off over here. He came around. He was going to the bathroom.”

    Cox tells Mascorro to check out the “little plastic cups” in the baby changing station of the men’s restroom.

    Mascorro found methamphetamine in the changing station, the video narrator says.

    From McDonald’s To Laramore’s Trailer
    The video cuts to Mascorro interviewing Laramore, whose face is blurred. It shows Laramore giving the wrong spelling of his surname and giving his birth year as 1988 when it was actually 1989.

    The narrator says Mascorro had “reasonable suspicion” Laramore had methamphetamine, and Mascorro “compelled Mr. Laramore’s identification.”

    Mascorro asks for Laramore’s address, in the video.

    “I’d rather – prefer not to give that to you,” answers Laramore.

    The narrator announces that Laramore left work early “without telling anyone.” The narrator also says Mascorro contacted the Hot Springs County Attorney’s Office, and the attorney “agreed Sergeant Mascorro had probable cause to either cite or arrest Mr. Laramore.”

    The video cuts to Mascorro leaving the scene, and soon cuts again to Laramore’s trailer house home.

    It shows Mascorro arguing with Laramore, who was behind his front door. And it shows Mascorro forcibly shouldering open the door, getting shot by a pistol-brandishing Laramore once inside, and firing back, killing Laramore.

    What It Does Not Show
    The video’s 10 minutes of footage are pulled from a longer case interval of nearly four hours.

    The video does not show Mascorro's other discussions at the McDonald's or the rest of his interview with Laramore. It does not show the conversation Mascorro had later with Hot Springs County Attorney deputy Kelly Owens, in which he questioned (and Owens confirmed) that Mascorro was within his legal authority to ask Laramore for his information.

    But when Mascorro said he was going to arrest Laramore for police interference because Laramore had lied about his name and age, Owens said Laramore could simply not answer the door, and that Mascorro “should just issue a citation,” according to the Sept. 21, 2023, decision letter by special prosecutor Daniel Erramouspe.

    Mascorro had told other people of his plan to arrest Laramore, during the intervening hours, Erramouspe wrote.

    Reportedly, more than three hours passed between the McDonald’s incident and Mascorro’s arrival at Laramore’s home. Because so much time had passed and Mascorro didn’t have exigent circumstances compelling him to enter Laramore’s home, Mascorro’s break-in was illegal, Erramouspe concluded.

    Mascorro in his own interview with DCI Special Agent Kiel Holder claimed that when Laramore shut the door in his face, “this gave him fresh pursuit because Laramore was now fleeing,” says a summary of the May 23, 2023 ,DCI interview.

    Erramouspe disagreed with that claim and determined Mascorro didn’t have the “fresh pursuit” justification to break in.

    “Mascorro could have issued citations or left the matter to be charged in long form,” wrote Erramouspe. “However, he felt that breaking into a person’s domicile was the best course of action for the misdemeanor of interference with a peace officer.”

    It was a “blessing in this calamity” that Laramore’s wife Brandi was not shot in the crossfire, he added.

    Responding to a Cowboy State Daily request for comment on the video release, Mascorro's attorney John Worrall said he had no comment, "other than to point out that good journalism and objectivity have become separated in the last number of years."

  5. Cop's in America remind me of the religious leaders called the Pharisees in the days of Christ ..? For all these Pharisees care about is themselves and they would protect those who were apart of their group .. the people of that day were beneath them .. they had they last and only say ..they like to be greeted in the market places .. they were men who were dressed the same way .. and here's the kicker ..the Pharisees would go out and find men to join their group .. and when they do find some men to join , " then those ones that Joined that group of the Pharisees became worse than the ones that were already in that group 😼 and it will get worse and worse and worse .. that's how you need to become governor or someone who can stop this 😳đŸ„ș

  6. How about you turn comments on for the video about the obvious murder of that lady in the cop car AND the dude driving it into the lake. Their police covering literally everything up and you make it about the lady? Fishy fishy buddy

  7. Correct me if I'm wrong but from what I've got so far from this video is that the cop violated the rights by breaking into their home without a search warrant and the meth head shot the cop out of self-defense.

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