Cop's MySpace Status Costs Him a Conviction in Court

We've covered teens being fired, firemen being reprimanded, people being arrested, and politicians getting in hot water all for comments or photos displayed on social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace. Vaughan Ettienne, a New York policeman, recently discovered yet another repercussion of unadulterated comments on his profile pages: a suspect's acquittal in court.
After pursuing a supposedly armed ex-con on a stolen motorcycle, Ettienne apprehended the man who suffered three broken ribs during the vicious altercation. The suspect subsequently accused Ettienne of brutality, claiming the policeman planted a gun on him to justify the beat down. During the ensuing brutality case, the New York Supreme Court subpoenaed comments and videos from Ettienne's profile pages.
On the day before the incident, the policeman's Facebook status read "Vaughan is watching 'Training Day' to brush up on proper police procedure," and his MySpace status was "devious." Still not finished, Ettienne remarked on a video of a policeman punching a suspect, "If he wanted to tune him up some he shoulda delayed cuffing him . . . And if you were gonna hit a cuffed suspect at least get your moneys worth cause now he's gonna get disciplined for a f*gg*t a** love tap." As a result, the suspect was acquitted for possession of the firearm. Ettienne, in his defense, dismissed his comments as "locker room" braggadocio, but admitted he may have been at fault for the suspect's acquittal.
We've recommended this before, but with social networking sites increasingly becoming a daily Darwin Awards competition, we can't stress it enough: discretion, discretion, discretion. Remember, while you may think you can air your grievances in anonymity among the hundreds of millions of Facebook/MySpace members, Big Brother and your nosy neighbors are always watching. [From: Ars Technica]
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