NeuralPress

NeuralPress AI Verified Insights

Vetted by NeuralPress's Multi-Agent Verifier for strict factual validity and event relevance. Our compliance engine cross-checks and filters search results to ensure zero false correlations or misleading content.

Primary Sources

theblaze.com
VIDEO: Cop turns in her badge and gun after allegedly posting racist ...

A Houston police officer was relieved of duty after video on social media allegedly showed her ranting about black people and using the N-word numerous times.Ashley Gonzalez said in the post on Instagram that she confronted someone trying to steal her purse and called them the N-word during the altercation.'That is a sick mindset and is violence waiting to happen.' "The amount of times that I will always and forever say that I f**king hate n*****s, oh my God. I f**king hate n*****s. Like, I hate y'all," Gonzalez says in the video."I don't f**king, 'Oh, we were slaves!' This and that. I don't give a f**k, n*****. For a f**king reason you guys were f**king slaves. You guys don't know anything better than to f**king steal!" she added.She mocked the alleged thief for being offended when she used the N-word to insult them."Y'all don't know how good it felt to say n***** out loud. ... I felt like I was back in the Marine Corps, n*****," she laughed.She went on to assert that if a black person called for the police and she responded, she would put that person in jail.The video was posted to social media, where it quickly went viral. KHOU-TV counted the times she used the N-word and reported it was more than 25 times. Police1 confirmed that Gonzalez served in the Marine Corps from 2019 until 2023 and also worked as an officer for the Houston Police Dept. starting in 2024.The Houston Police Officers' Union condemned the video in a statement on its Facebook account."The Houston Police Officers' Union is extremely disturbed by a video circulating on social media regarding an officer making offensive, racist comments. In no way does the HPOU or its leadership condone or tolerate racist behavior from any of our officers," the statement reads.RELATED: Mom who used racial slur in viral video faces jail time over criminal charges NAACP Houston President Bishop James Dixon also condemned the comments but defended other police officers against broad generalizations. "That is a sick mindset and is violence waiting to happen," Dixon said to KHOU. "Most people in law enforcement don't represent this ideology," Dixon added. "She misrepresented, you know, her colleagues and those who are out here every day trying to build public trust through the kind of service they provide." Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

theblaze.com
storybroadcast.com
The Officer's Warning Echoed In My Mind—And His Note Shattered Their ...

My wife got pulled over for speeding, and after the officer checked her license, he asked me to step out of the car. His face turned serious. “Sir, you need to hear me carefully. Do not go home tonight. Go somewhere safe.” I just stared at him. “What? Why?” He hesitated, then lowered his voice. “I can’t explain it here. But what I found is bad. Very bad.” Then he slipped a note into my hand. When I opened it, my whole world changed. The patrol car’s lights washed over our Honda Civic in red and blue, turning the inside of the car into a flickering aquarium of color. It was the sort of traffic stop that happens every day on American highways and rarely becomes anything more than a warning, a ticket, and an irritated story told over dinner later. My wife, Sarah Williams Chen, had been driving seventy-eight in a sixty-five on Route 35, not dangerously fast, just fast enough to catch the eye of a state trooper working radar behind an overpass as we made our way toward her mother’s place in Millbrook on a gray Saturday afternoon. She handed over her license and registration with the calm competence of someone who had been stopped before and always emerged with nothing worse than a fine and a mildly disapproving lecture. When Officer Martinez asked if she knew why he had pulled her over, she gave him the small apologetic smile that had once charmed me in a crowded coffee shop near Columbia, back when we were both younger and still believed our lives would be built out of honesty because we ourselves intended to be honest people. Officer Martinez took the documents and returned to his cruiser. I watched him through the rearview mirror, expecting the usual few minutes of typing and waiting, the little bureaucratic pause that stands between inconvenience and continuation. Instead, something in his posture changed. He sat straighter. He leaned toward the screen with a concentration that didn’t belong to a routine speeding stop. Minutes stretched. Traffic hissed past. Sarah adjusted the rearview mirror and brushed invisible lint from her sleeve. When the officer stepped out again, he did not return to her side of the car. He came to mine and tapped lightly on the passenger window. “Sir, could I speak with you privately for a moment?” he asked. There was nothing aggressive in his tone. That made it worse. I glanced at Sarah. She looked confused, but not alarmed. I opened the door and followed him a short distance behind the car, far enough from the window that ou...

storybroadcast.com
usatoday.com
Houston police officer racial rant on social media - USA TODAY

A Houston police officer was suspended after a viral video showed her using racist slurs, leading to calls for her firing.

usatoday.com
facebook.com
Westfield Police are asking people to remain indoors and/or avoid ...

Westfield Police are asking people to remain indoors and/or avoid the area of Sandra Circle/West Court Tuesday evening ... Nunez said that around 9:40 A.M., an ...

facebook.com