‘Go Ahead and Call the Cops. They Can’t Unrape You’—Cops

If you need something a little stronger than
coffee to perk you up this Monday morning, perhaps disgust and
outrage will do the trick? Because I think I have just the thing
for that. Introducing…
two Austin police officers who
not only think mocking rape and
robbery victims is hilarious but were too stupid not to record
themselves during the conversation. 

In the video, the two unseen Austin cops—later revealed as
Officers Michael Castillo and Mark Lytle—start out discussing how
crime better watch out when they’re riding together. “Shit would
get real for the bad guys,” says one of the officers. “The world
would be at peace for a week.”

The other officer counters that peace would probably be likely
“because we’d turn a blind eye towards everything.” It
continues:

Officer 1: I want to report a robbery! You probably deserved
it.
(something unintelligible about finding a rape victim)
Officer 1: Look at that girl over there.
(one of them blows a whistle at her)
Officer 2: Go ahead and call the cops. They can’t unrape you.
(laughter)
Officer 1: Yeah, exactly. … You did turn your camera off,
didn’t you?
Officer 2: They can’t unrape you!

The Austin Police Department
confirmed to local station KXAN
that the video is authentic and
said an internal investigation is underway. “The investigation will
include a comprehensive audit of the involved officers’ contacts
with victims of sexual assault to ensure the actions taken during
the contacts meet the expectations of the Department, the public
and most importantly, the victims,” it said in a statement.

Austin lawyer Drew Gibbs, who first posted the video to YouTube,
told KXAN the video was obtained as part of his firm’s
investigation into an auto crash. “The comments on the video struck
me as inappropriate and I chose to allow the court of public
opinion to decide if they agreed,” said Gibbs.

“Arguably even more inappropriate than the rape joke made by the
police officer was the other officer’s initial reaction, which was
to hope that the video camera was not rolling. … I would hope
that when a police officer observes another officer acting
inappropriately, or worse, illegally, that their initial reaction
would be to correct that behavior and prevent its
reoccurrence.”

Watch the whole thing: 

A spokesman for the Austin Police Association said “we all would
be embarrassed if everything we said was made public” and that the
statements the officers made on camera do not “reflect those
officers work ethic”.

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