Controversial encounters between law-enforcement and civilians - the omnibus thread

This is a funny post, but it also makes me sad.

I’m not a 'Mercan,

But this is exactly the attitude that is expressed in almost every thread on police shootings I see here - it was in the 12 year old with the air pistol thread, so while I was aiming for satire - it’s really not very far from the truth of how I see the attitude towards police in the US.

I could well imagine, if instead of sleeping the girl had stumbled out of the bedrooms in the aftermath of the “flash bang” she would have been shot, and it would have been considered ok because she seemed like a threat, or because she should have known that when the police come the first thing you do is lay supine on the floor.

The article you link to is dated 3 October 2014, monstro’s link is dated 30 November 2014, and includes this:

ISTM that the article itself is mostly to give that bit of news and to let people know that, haha!, Justice sometimes get fucked up too.

Occasionally we do other things, like sleep and so forth.

Just reading the linked article, it appears the cop was blinded by a flash grenade and didn’t see anyone there. That more or less rules out murder or manslaughter. BUT he still fired his submachine gun into a house he presumably expected to be occupied, with no idea who he may or may not have been hitting. There’s no reasonable argument for self defence that I can see, and the level of recklessness that firing in that manner displays ought to be a serious crime in itself, and if it causes the death of someone it should be considered about as serious a crime as manslaughter.

This case, unlike many of the other cases mentioned, doesn’t involve a situation where someone had the option to comply with the police, but chose not to. Those are the cases where us “resident cop lovers” tend to defend the police.

Old incident, new story.

“Drop his f*** ass, drop his ass!!” one officer can be heard saying on the dashcam right before six cops put 23 bullets into a man who was lying on the ground.**

As usual, the victim was black and the cops got off scott free.


I’ll take this opportunity to add something personal here. I have contributed to this thread several times now. Never in my life have I personally witnessed police misbehavior. The few times (as the reporter of minor complaints) that I have interacted directly with the police, I have found the individual cops to be professional, competent and polite. It may be that’s because I’m white and usually polite myself.

That may be why I find these reports of apparent police misconduct so shocking. I want my law enforcement officers to be paragons of obedience to the law, not thugs.

Supine?! Are you kidding – supine is aggressive. Prone, maggot, and don’t look me in the eye.

The police officer who killed Eric Garner with a chokehold (this chokehold is apparently prohibited by the NYPD), caught on video, was not indicted for Garner’s death.

Whether or not this police officer should have been indicted, why was force necessary in the first place? The man was unarmed, upset, and not engaged in any activity dangerous to those around him, and it seems like this is a prime example of retreat being the wisest option.

I’ll revise this – not necessarily “retreat”, but de-escalation rather than escalation.

I don’t understand. All of this came to light and yet they got away with murder? Hos does this happen? How does the federal government NOT get involved at this stage?

It’s funny how it works - all this is clear, obvious, and unmistakeable. Yet a grand jury refuses to indict, and the family’s lawsuit is dismissed. It’s almost as if there were more to the story than one would think.

Regards,
Shodan

So is there?

In the current climate, and the willingness of local government to shield their police departments I wouldn’t be surprised if there was a coverup. But I’d like to know if the article as presented above misleading.

While trying to find more articles on this particular incident I found this little gem:

Jeebus. Some ass-hat shoots a cop, and all the cops immediately turn into vigilantes. Not only do they murder two unarmed guys in a car they suspected the perp to be in, but where obviously wrong about, by basically shooting the car on sight, but they endangered an entire neighborhood in their revenge killing, sending hundreds of rounds through other cars, business and homes AND even their own officers, one was almost killed by a bullet that just missed his head and another was shot in the arm.

What is the point of police if they’re all just all bunch of criminals?

There would have to have been a sufficient cover-up to convince a supposedly independent grand jury not to indict, and then another cover-up to convince the federal court to dismiss the family’s lawsuit.

“In sum, viewing all of the circumstances, the court finds that a reasonable officer in each of the officers’ shoes would have concluded that Jones posed an immediate threat of serious physical harm to all of the officers. The officers’ use of deadly force therefore was justified and reasonable,” Groh’s opinion reads.

Regards,
Shodan

Well duh, he was obviously a threat. He was a big black guy.

Who was schizophrenic and armed with a knife.

Regards,
Shodan

I’ve always thought it would be really heroic if a police officer died while using less-than-lethal force, on a person who had already injured him, because he was trying to preserve the life of the suspect.

I don’t suppose that’ll happen very often.

It’s anecdotal and I don’t have a cite. But Massad Ayoob, who was a police H2H consultant, tells the story of a rookie cop who confronted a man with a knife. The cop pulled his gun and demanded the knife wielder drop the weapon. Some onlooker taunted the cop with needing a gun to take one little knife away from a drunk. The cop holstered his pistol and attempted a knife disarm. He was stabbed to death.

I don’t call that “heroic” so much as “stupid”. I wouldn’t do it, and I have practiced knife disarms at least as much as the average cop.

Regards,
Shodan

This case is extra depressing. There’s no valid justification for not indicting the officer who killed him. We have crystal clear evidence showing a non-aggressive guy being tackled by several men and being strangled to death. For a suspicion as lame as selling cigarettes.

I’m starting think body cams won’t do shit. All the cameras will do is make the injustice harder to deny, but it won’t stop the injustice. :frowning:

I think they can help, because enough incidents like this one would presumably cause a Selma-like critical mass of anger and disapproval nation-wide. If all the police shootings of black people in 2016 are on video, then we’ll be able to determine much more accurately (if still not perfectly) which ones are legitimate and which ones aren’t.

Maybe I’m a little bit cynical, but I’m guessing we’re going to be hearing a lot of “Ooops, forgot to turn it on!” and “The camera failed! We swears!!” and “Our IT guy deleted the last year of video. Oops!”. BUT only when ti comes to police killing black or hispanic men, and 7 year old little girls. On the other hand, there will be terabytes of cop saves the kitten and similar scenarios. Definitely not the cops go on a rampage and revenge lynching, videos, those will be scrutinize very closely, then burned.