The Fairfax County Police are out of control and need oversight but are slick enough to organize "Campaign contributions" during election time to avoid it.

Police Oversight Commission releases first improper APD shooting designation in four years




By Anna Velasquez

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. —A 2012 officer-involved shooting has come under scrutiny by the Police Oversight Commission.
Tuesday, Robin Hammer, an independent review officer, said a cop violated policy.
Residents called Albuquerque police Dec. 17, 2012 to report a suspected burglary. Police learned it wasn’t a burglary, but the man inside, Christopher Sosa, was a wanted felon.
A SWAT team surrounded the home, but police said Sosa stole a car and tried to escape. An officer who had been assigned to guard the outer perimeter, and had been there for about three hours, said he saw Sosa coming toward him. That officer opened fire on Sosa.
He violated the Albuquerque Police Department’s use of deadly force against vehicles policy, according to Hammer. Hammer concluded the suspect's vehicle was traveling south on Jane Street, away from the officer, when shots were fired.
Hammer also said the officer’s statements directly after the shooting and months later during an internal investigation didn’t match up.
The officer did experience looming, however, which is the perception that the vehicle was coming toward him when he fired at the windshield and tracked it.
This is the first time in at least four years the POC has found an officer’s use of deadly force to be improper, according to the Albuquerque Journal.