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

They were probably hoping to find her using drugs or doing some other illegal activity that would allow them to charge her with something. It’s not worth their time come out to make sure that a member of the community is alright if they can’t get an arrest out of it.

Responding to the call like sane human beings, pulling up with the lights on and knocking at the front door, wouldn’t have given them the chance to conduct an investigation into any wrongdoings they may imagine her being up to.

Not only was the family arrested once for loitering, but they were re-arrested for loitering when they were released from jail.

This is what oppression looks like.

OK, reality, this is just getting hackneyed. I mean, this episode–no scratch that, the whole damned season–is just filled with lazy writing!

Frankly, I think the damned Universe has jumped the shark.

Fort Worth officer jailed on murder charge after fatally shooting Atatiana Jefferson

Fort Worth officer Aaron Dean was charged with murder Monday after fatally shooting Atatiana Jefferson
while she played video games in her home.

I got beat on the report, but this is great news.

I agree with most of this. Given the late hour, the bad neighborhood, and the temperature in Fort Worth at that hour (~45 degrees), a house with all its front door wide open, I am guessing, suggested to the arriving police that it was either a burglary, or the inhabitants were cooking a batch of drugs and were trying to vent away the smell. For either case, surreptitiously approaching the house might either get them the burglars, or a bunch of illicit drug makers, whereas showing up with lights and sirens would allow the criminals to get away or destroy evidence. I really suspect the cops were hoping it was the second. Different agency, but Always Think Forfeiture became a meme for a reason.

When I was burglarized, the responding officer did not act like k9befriender’s example officer. But I’ve had friends in similar situations who, when they called the police, the police were more interested in trying to find evidence against the victim, than trying to gather evidence about the burglary.

Glad the officer was charged. In a similar situation a few years ago, Fort Worth police officers weren’t.

I have yet to see or watch a story on this and hear anything about her neighborhood,let alone describing it as “bad”. Where did you come across this characterization?

I guess a working class neighborhood populated mostly by blacks and Hispanics has to be bad. Why else would a cop have his gun out and use it??

Was it a working class neighborhood? The murdered woman was a pharmaceutical rep studying to be a doctor.

Coming soon to a headline near you: Shooting victim was a drug dealer.

CMC fnord!

She was staying at her mother’s house to take care of her. The street shows dozens of properties under 100K and several under 80k.

The middle of this article is the working class description of the neighborhood.

I think the rest of America is beginning to see why black people don’t trust police, even to “serve and protect”

Re “working class neighborhood”.

That’s how I would describe my neighborhood. The median income for my neighborhood is just $31K. In the mornings, I see a lot of folks walking out of their homes dressed in uniforms of some type. There are also more than a few pensioners here, and I’m not talking about the kind of pensioner who eventually moves down to Boca. More like the kind who are raising their grandkids.

But there are pockets of wealth. My next-door-neighbor and the guy across the street from me are quite well-to-do, as evidenced by the number of vehicles, motorcyles, and boats they own. I’m also not what you would call “working class.”

The neighborhood isn’t one that I would call “bad”. Yes, there are property crimes here but not any more than what you find in the hoity-toitier neighborhood just down the street. Besides, we’re in the freakin’ city. There are no crime-free neighborhoods smack dab in the middle of the city (or anywhere else, for that matter) But I would describe it as “relatively safe”. There are certainly many places in the city that I would not describe that way.

So I would caution anyone from thinking “working class” is synonomous with “bad”. I would only trust someone who is very familiar with Fort Worth to make that kind of assessment.

I don’t associate “working-class neighborhood” with crime, because the term clearly implies that the people there are working, and the bad neighborhoods are the ones where people aren’t.

I can only imagine how the neighbor who called is feeling.

Check out this story from USA TODAY: These cops lied. They can still send you to prison

Across the USA, prosecutors aren’t tracking officer misconduct, skirting Supreme Court “Brady” rules and sometimes leading to wrongful convictions.

Absolutely sickening that these thugs get to keep their jobs and continue to ruin people’s lives.

I completely agree. It might be a lower income area, but the houses are maintained and look nice backed on the pictures and videos. This was a bad cop who should not have been on the force.

“…should not have been…”

But there are so many who should not have been or should not be, and the “system” covers and lies for them. And if they fuck up in one city or county, they just hop to another.

Usually with NO consequences.

Now we can probably expect “the system”, the police, and the “media” to look for ways to defame the victim - like they usually try to do.

Enough.

The story in UCBearcats link includes a searchable database of investigations of officers, and a call for help to include expanding it. It is well worth the read. Police misconduct: Discipline records for thousands of cops uncovered