Thomas Quinlan

Altered police training records open the floodgates for legal chaos, reversed convictions and massive lawsuits across Ohio against the State

CLEVELAND, OH — In the courtrooms of Ohio, a foundational and basic assumption is being dismantled, piece by fraudulent piece. Every day, men and women wearing law enforcement uniforms and carrying weapons take the stand, swear to the tell the truth, and then testify against American citizens they’ve stopped, detained, arrested and filed criminal charges against. Judges sign their warrants.  Prosecutors rely on their sworn affidavits.  Citizens lose liberty and lives based only on their word. Thousands of American and Ohio citizens have died because they’ve been shot, beaten or chased to death by a law enforcer.  Thousands more are…

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Quinlan’s running an OPOTA training records laundering operation out of the Attorney General’s office, and hiding uncertified cops from Ohio’s mayors, judges, prosecutors

CLEVELAND, OH — At precisely midnight on January 1, 2024, something extraordinarily criminal happened across the State of Ohio. One thousand and eighty-one police officers — men and women from 38 law enforcement agencies entrusted with the power to arrest, search, and use deadly force — ceased to exist as legal peace officers. They became private citizens impersonating law enforcement officers. Under Ohio law, a police officer’s authority is not a permanent appointment. It operates more like an annual driver’s license. It is a conditional privilege, renewed annually through mandatory training that is reported on computer systems owned by the…

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