Yes and no. In the lyrics of his song "They Don't Care About Us," he refers to being a victim of police brutality-- he has explained that when he was arrested and accused of child molestation, the police handled him roughly and dislocated his shoulder during the arrest; they also treated him like they believed he was guilty. But for the most part, the police protected him over the years, and he seemed to get along with them -- he was a big celebrity and a popular star, and it does not seem that his relationship with law enforcement was always adversarial.
The police would probably have it as evidence.
The Beatles / Queen / Stevie Wonder / Michael Jackson / The Police / Talking Heads / Prince
Yes, police had conducted a search warrent on Neverland Ranch in 2004 in which a bottle of Prednisone was found.
In 2005 after the police turned the place upside looking for evidence, he said it was just a house now and no longer a home.
"Somebody's Watching Me" has been recorded, remixed, and remastered throughout the decades. The original recording, though, took place in 1983 and was Rockwell's debut single that was released the following year.
Police brutality has been reported to have increased since the 9/11 attacks, but there are no published statistics on the frequency of police brutality actions.
Collective Opposed to Police Brutality was created in 1995.
There can be no justification for brutality. The job of the police is to protect and defend.
No-one should "do" police brutality, that's why it's called brutality rather than reasonable force, which is what police officers should use.
Two false accusations of child molestation, a skin disease called vitiligo, being beaten as a child, police brutality, abuse from the media, lots of tough criticism, many harsh rumors, etc...
they thought he did something to a kid
No Michael's family did not see him die. The family was in the kitchen when Michael died and the maid found him dead and then called the police.
Shailendra Misra has written: 'Police Brutality' -- subject(s): Police brutality
pathos
decades
Yes.
Your question cannot be answered. Police brutality in the US is both a crime and a civil rights violation. There is no 'use' for it.