
The Virginia State Police Only Care About Make-Believe Minors
@epicenterdefacto
Posted 2d ago · 7 min read

1. A Disgraced Officer Of The Law
A concerning event took place in the Commonwealth of Virginia involving a 10-year-old girl. A Virginia State trooper pulled over a man who was rushing in his car to get his 10-year-old daughter to a hospital because of a life-threatening emergency, and this same trooper made death threats against the father instead of helping him. Below is a video that describes this incident.
A Virginia State Trooper Places A 10-Year-Old Girl Into Greater Danger After Threatening Her Father With A Deadly Weapon
https://youtu.be/MeoaVYCV5go?si=XxUocu2Snl8r2nby
Now, what really outrages me about this incident is here a little girl was on the cusp of death and the offending police officer, Timothy Derosha, was completely dead set on terrorizing her father and threatening him with a handgun. If you follow the news all around the United States about how American police officers act when they're on duty, you'll notice that the Virginia State Police has by far the worst reputation out of any police force in the nation.
What eats into my anger is the probability that if Trooper Derosha were ever to be reassigned to work on the Internet Crimes Against Children ("I.C.A.C.") Task Force there in his state, he would mirror the other dirty cops and roast a suspect for attempting to do something that would be perfectly legal for a 14-, 15-, or 16-year-old boy to do. The decoy would e-mail a picture of a teenage girl that had a well-built figure to lure the suspect to a sting house.
Trooper Derosha would likely treat the suspect in the online sex-sting operation as though he were some kind of serial child rapist, even though there would be no victim and the decoy would be posing as a teenage girl instead of as a prepubescent child. He would likely throw the suspect down to the ground during the arrest at the scene of the online sex-sting operation as though he were a homicidal maniac or something.
This is what I mean when I claim that these police officers have double standards. An adult man can get into greater trouble for fantasizing online about being a teenage boy again than a cop can do so for either neglecting the safety of a prepubescent child or even going as far as causing that little kid almost to die.
It's what you see down in Georgia too. Authorities there will find a way to charge a 17-year-old boy with a heinous sex crime merely for kissing his 15-year-old girlfriend on the lips; whereas if a parent goes to the police to ask them to protect their small children from an abusive parent, the police may end up doing nothing at all. A YouTube influencer named Timothy Mills had gone through that exact situation there in Georgia after his deranged wife had brutalized all four of their children who were each under 10 years of age.
It also brings to mind the fact that the Virginia State Police kicked down the front door of Norman Michael Achin's residence and trashed his residence, even though they really had no legitimate grounds to enter onto the premises. If you don't know who Mr. Achin is, he is an influencer on YouTube who exposes police corruption connected with the I.C.A.C. program.
At least in California, Los Angeles County made an attempt to reform their police department by creating the Christopher Commission that was, unfortunately, short-lived. During its brief existence, the Christopher Commission served as an oversight board to the activities of the Los Angeles Police Department.
The Commonwealth of Virginia direly needs an oversight board of that same nature, because the Internal Affairs Division in each police department doesn't do hardly anything to discipline police officers that engage in the kind of misconduct that Trooper Derosha did. Moreover, way too many judges in the Commonwealth of Virginia turn a blind eye to the lack of integrity of these police officers.
Trooper Derosha's lawyer attempted to get the court to allow his client to hide behind the doctrine of qualified immunity, but, luckily, the judge wouldn't have it. This police officer deserves to be fired from his job, among other things. My heart goes out to Trooper Derosha's victim, Michael Morris, and Mr. Morris's daughter.
2. Police Corruption In The Commonwealth Of Virginia
Speaking of Norman Michael Achin, recently he posted a video on his YouTube channel in which he described a number of conspicuous irregularities in the conduct of the law-enforcement officials that perform online sex-sting operations. Below is a video in which Mr. Achin goes into details of these law-enforcement officials' wrongdoing.
Fairfax County Police Arrested Ten Suspects For Sexual Offenses Involving Minors
https://youtu.be/OjhMCE3UIB8?si=n9bSmw5ZakhBlD8e
You'll probably notice that nowhere in the article that Mr. Achin reads out loud in his video above does it mention what the ages of the minors were. Of course, it is clear that there were no minors at all but rather decoys posing as minors in the sex-sting operations. Therefore, these ten men never victimized anyone.
Trooper Timothy Derosha, on the other hand, placed the life of a 10-year-old girl into jeopardy who was on the cusp of death after she had stopped breathing, and his only interest was to overpower the little girl's father merely because Trooper Derosha wouldn't take the time to listen to him. These are the same kinds of idiots that usually end up working on the I.C.A.C. Task Force to entrap adult men left and right for actions that don't really involve any real victims.

3. Final Thoughts
There is a saying in the Commonwealth of Virginia that "Virginia Is For Lovers." Where that saying came from, I don't know. I remember once seeing the title of a major online article that read "Virginia Is For Losers." I believe that saying.
People usually point their fingers at New York and California as having the most governmental corruption in the nation, but enough horror stories, especially about the police, have come out of the Commonwealth of Virginia for that state jurisdiction to have earned its place in the "Law Enforcement Hall Of Shame."
Virginia judges are constantly coddling these savage Neanderthals that work in their state jurisdiction's police departments throughout that same state jurisdiction. I am happy that Michael Morris and his daughter ended up with a Federal judge that actually takes the statutes set forth on the law books seriously.
I don't deny that police work is tough no matter where it is in the United States. However, at the same time, if a Virginia State trooper is going to get way out of line with someone who is desperately attempting to get medical care for their child, then that trooper should not be working as an officer of the law at all.
Unfortunately, I have heard of similar cases with the Virginia State Police, and what usually happens is that the officer of the law merely gets demoted to a desk job. I honestly believe that if the Rodney King beating or the murder of George Floyd had occurred in the Commonwealth of Virginia, the offending officers would have gotten off scot-free.
It's a shame, because the Commonwealth of Virginia is directly next door to our nation's capital - Washington, D.C. You would think that public servants would be better behaved in the Commonwealth of Virginia than anywhere else in the nation because of it, but it's not that way. In any event, it's good to find out that Mr. Morris and his daughter may be receiving some kind of justice for their troubles with Trooper Derosha.
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