
""I know you don't got no lives out of here," a user who goes by the name Stitch the Camera Guy says in one Feb. 1 clip, as he taunts two cops at the West 181st Street No. 1 subway station in Washington Heights."
""Nobody loves you because of the piece of s-ts you all are.... Scumbags, you hear. Just f-king scumbags. Dirty little rats.""
""You going to have to listen to the judge if you arrest me, motherf-ker," he tells another officer in a Dec. 21 post, before threatening the cop with a lawsuit if he's arrested."
Agitators confront NYPD officers in subways, station houses, patrol cars and on streets, recording and posting the encounters to social media. Videos include officers' full names, photos and histories of complaints and lawsuits, effectively doxxing them. Confronters verbally abuse and threaten officers while asserting First Amendment protection and threatening legal retaliation if arrested. The tactic mirrors national anti-ICE doxxing efforts such as the ICE List, which publicly identified thousands of immigration staffers and shared personal details. Many officers and supporters view the practice as harassment, dangerous exposure and a challenge to policing safety.
Read at New York Post
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