The second incident happened in Vallejo, CA. A Vallejo officer made a traffic stop on two suspected carjackers and a person in the neighborhood recorded about five minutes of the encounter and released it to the press, claiming the officer called one of the men the N-word.
The media ate it up and played the video conveniently bleeping the reportedly offensive word, the officer was placed on leave, internal affairs got involved, and finally, somebody actually listened to the complete video and discovered the whole story was ludicrous. The officer was actually calling the man by his name, which sounded nothing like the N-word. The resident who videoed that encounter heard what he wanted to hear. He said he recorded the police encounter with those men because he thought the police were going to shoot them.
That California citizen's predisposition to believe that an officer would shoot handcuffed suspects can be traced back to the mother of all recent false witness accounts against law enforcement, "hands up, don't shoot," which was perpetuated after the fatal shooting of Michael Brown.
The man credited with originating that falsehood, Brown's friend Dorian Johnson, should be in prison for the mayhem he helped incite. But instead he is free and suing Officer Darren Wilson and the former chief of the Ferguson Police Department for violating his civil rights. Last week the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decided to let that suit proceed.
Which is an outrage. People bearing false witness against police officers need to be punished, not rewarded. This kind of lie needs to be deterred for the safety of both law enforcement officers and the public.