Police abuse
Comments
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No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.0 -
http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_591c9070e4b03b485cae1129/amp
Although @Thirty Bills Unpaid scoffs at this idea with great contempt, had this campus officer been trained in SLC, this kid would be alive, getting counseling.Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
Agreed. We can all look at this and analyze the many different ways this could have and should have ended. As it stands, is this police abuse or police who are inefficiently trained to handle a dynamic situation? I personally can think of several ways I would have attempted to handle that situation better before ever needing to shoot, but that's my opinion and maybe it would or wouldn't have worked. None of us can predict the potential behavior of an unstable person who has a knife. Being the student president of the pride alliance has no significance in the matter. It's like the media is trying to paint this as a bias shooting based on sexual orientation. Quit peddling bullshit and stick to the story. They couldn't use race so this was the next best attention grabber.Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.0 -
I didn't get the impression they media was trying to paint this as an attack in sexual orientation, but rather to show that this was an engaged, involved, and humanitarian-oriented university student, rather than a "criminal".tbergs said:
Agreed. We can all look at this and analyze the many different ways this could have and should have ended. As it stands, is this police abuse or police who are inefficiently trained to handle a dynamic situation? I personally can think of several ways I would have attempted to handle that situation better before ever needing to shoot, but that's my opinion and maybe it would or wouldn't have worked. None of us can predict the potential behavior of an unstable person who has a knife. Being the student president of the pride alliance has no significance in the matter. It's like the media is trying to paint this as a bias shooting based on sexual orientation. Quit peddling bullshit and stick to the story. They couldn't use race so this was the next best attention grabber.Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.0 -
Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
"...the student, allegedly carrying a knife, "would not comply with the officers’ commands."
"Schultz continued to advance on the officers with the knife," the statement read. An officer then fired, according to the statement."
I see nothing wrong with that story, at least to the point where it belongs in the police abuse thread.
The video shows them asking him to drop the knife for over a minute. Shows him approaching one officer and a female voiced yelled out one last time "drop it." I cant tell from the video, but it sounded like the cop being approached was a female cop, and you expect her to wrestle a guy to the ground with a knife?
Even if it was a make cop I wouldn't expect that.
It is a sad story, and sad it ended this way and sad he didn't get help before this incident. But I place zero blame on the cops.
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This was not some 12-year-old "kid" with a toy gun.Bentleyspop said:
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.
A 4th year student, so that makes him probably 22. When is he not a "kid" anymore? Many rookie cops are that age too, or younger.
Not that 22 makes a big difference, but thats just an example the picture the media and others are trying to paint on a story like this to make the cops out to be bad.
Knives can kill just like a gun. He approaching after over a minute of asking to put down the knife, the cops have a right to protect themselves.0 -
what with x-ray vision? how could they tell, after it was reported the person had a gun, that the gun wasn't concealed on the victim? if someone told you someone had a gun that wasn't out in the open would you really trust that said person didn't have one? come on your stretching it if you say yesBentleyspop said:
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.0 -
What I thought too. Especially if they were reported to have a knife and a gun, and they are clearly wielding a knife, I wouldn't assume they isn't a gun just because I can't see it.pjhawks said:
what with x-ray vision? how could they tell, after it was reported the person had a gun, that the gun wasn't concealed on the victim? if someone told you someone had a gun that wasn't out in the open would you really trust that said person didn't have one? come on your stretching it if you say yesBentleyspop said:
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.
But its all a mute point anyway. He had a knife. Knives are deadly.
He was asked for over a minute on video to drop said knife (and who knows for how long before the video started).
He approached the officers with the knife in his hand.
And yet, the media titles are still going to spread this like a homophobic hate murder.0 -
moot
sorry, pet peeve0 -
I'll just come back to my point - properly trained police officers know how to deal with the situation, and it isn't just repeatedly commanding "drop the knife", and then shooting the guy. You think Canadian cops don't face individuals with knives or other potential weapons fairly frequently? They do; they just typically respond differently, and shoot fewer people.mace1229 said:
What I thought too. Especially if they were reported to have a knife and a gun, and they are clearly wielding a knife, I wouldn't assume they isn't a gun just because I can't see it.pjhawks said:
what with x-ray vision? how could they tell, after it was reported the person had a gun, that the gun wasn't concealed on the victim? if someone told you someone had a gun that wasn't out in the open would you really trust that said person didn't have one? come on your stretching it if you say yesBentleyspop said:
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.
But its all a mute point anyway. He had a knife. Knives are deadly.
He was asked for over a minute on video to drop said knife (and who knows for how long before the video started).
He approached the officers with the knife in his hand.
And yet, the media titles are still going to spread this like a homophobic hate murder.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
When it comes to shootings involving the police, the media either ignores it, reports it as is (local interest only) or takes advantage of some non-related factor to the shooting for national attention and sensationalism. If they were so set on making sure people knew about the deceased then they could have added "Suicidal Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Displaying a Knife Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer. That would truly put the situation in to perspective for anyone just perusing headlines. You don't need to defend the media here. They are purposely jading the view before anyone even reads the story. If you want to go that route then they should provide a brief bio about the officer as well so people know her societal impact outside of wearing a uniform.oftenreading said:
I didn't get the impression they media was trying to paint this as an attack in sexual orientation, but rather to show that this was an engaged, involved, and humanitarian-oriented university student, rather than a "criminal".tbergs said:
Agreed. We can all look at this and analyze the many different ways this could have and should have ended. As it stands, is this police abuse or police who are inefficiently trained to handle a dynamic situation? I personally can think of several ways I would have attempted to handle that situation better before ever needing to shoot, but that's my opinion and maybe it would or wouldn't have worked. None of us can predict the potential behavior of an unstable person who has a knife. Being the student president of the pride alliance has no significance in the matter. It's like the media is trying to paint this as a bias shooting based on sexual orientation. Quit peddling bullshit and stick to the story. They couldn't use race so this was the next best attention grabber.Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
It's a hopeless situation...0 -
It's one thing to get shot at a road side stop when you've done nothing other than pull over as requested... it's another to get shot as you act like a lunatic.
Here's the pragmatic item to the situation that nobody has stated succinctly yet: if you don't want to get shot... don't arm yourself with a knife, threaten people with it, ignore the police when they tell you to drop it, and advance on armed officers with their guns drawn.
"My brain's a good brain!"0 -
According to WaPo there were 111 shootings by police of people armed with knives in 2016. The Guardian says the number is 159. A pretty big difference, but at least we have an idea of the statistics. Unfortunately I can't find anywhere in any data that indicates how many encounters police have with people wielding knives, which would at least provide some perspective to how frequently it ends in a fatal shooting.oftenreading said:
I'll just come back to my point - properly trained police officers know how to deal with the situation, and it isn't just repeatedly commanding "drop the knife", and then shooting the guy. You think Canadian cops don't face individuals with knives or other potential weapons fairly frequently? They do; they just typically respond differently, and shoot fewer people.mace1229 said:
What I thought too. Especially if they were reported to have a knife and a gun, and they are clearly wielding a knife, I wouldn't assume they isn't a gun just because I can't see it.pjhawks said:
what with x-ray vision? how could they tell, after it was reported the person had a gun, that the gun wasn't concealed on the victim? if someone told you someone had a gun that wasn't out in the open would you really trust that said person didn't have one? come on your stretching it if you say yesBentleyspop said:
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.
But its all a mute point anyway. He had a knife. Knives are deadly.
He was asked for over a minute on video to drop said knife (and who knows for how long before the video started).
He approached the officers with the knife in his hand.
And yet, the media titles are still going to spread this like a homophobic hate murder.
Now for Canada, I found it virtually impossible to figure out what the numbers even are just for shootings in general. I'm sure it is lower because of the obvious fact of the general population difference, 320+ million in the US compared to 36+ million in Canada.
https://news.vice.com/article/its-impossible-to-find-out-exactly-how-many-people-are-shot-by-cops-in-canada
I do continue to agree with you on the training aspect because law enforcement definitely needs training, training and more training, but let's be a little less quick to call it abuse just because a cop shot somebody.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
To add to that, people are arguing on behalf of someone who was trying to be killed and decided arming themselves and advancing on police was how they were going to handle it. I think it's kind of fucked up we spend so much time worrying about someone who was trying to be killed and has most likely emotionally damaged the officers who had to deal with the situation, the officer who fired the fatal shot, anyone who witnessed it and those who knew anyone involved. Sorry, if you don't want to live anymore, kill yourself and spare everyone else from going through the fucking circus show. Call me cold, but you won't get my sympathy.Thirty Bills Unpaid said:It's one thing to get shot at a road side stop when you've done nothing other than pull over as requested... it's another to get shot as you act like a lunatic.
Here's the pragmatic item to the situation that nobody has stated succinctly yet: if you don't want to get shot... don't arm yourself with a knife, threaten people with it, ignore the police when they tell you to drop it, and advance on armed officers with their guns drawn.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
I didn't call it abuse. I said that if the officers are not being trained appropriately in methods to deal with these situations then the departments are negligent, because there's no way to argue that there aren't well recognized methods out there to handle these situations, which are not particularly rare.tbergs said:
According to WaPo there were 111 shootings by police of people armed with knives in 2016. The Guardian says the number is 159. A pretty big difference, but at least we have an idea of the statistics. Unfortunately I can't find anywhere in any data that indicates how many encounters police have with people wielding knives, which would at least provide some perspective to how frequently it ends in a fatal shooting.oftenreading said:
I'll just come back to my point - properly trained police officers know how to deal with the situation, and it isn't just repeatedly commanding "drop the knife", and then shooting the guy. You think Canadian cops don't face individuals with knives or other potential weapons fairly frequently? They do; they just typically respond differently, and shoot fewer people.mace1229 said:
What I thought too. Especially if they were reported to have a knife and a gun, and they are clearly wielding a knife, I wouldn't assume they isn't a gun just because I can't see it.pjhawks said:
what with x-ray vision? how could they tell, after it was reported the person had a gun, that the gun wasn't concealed on the victim? if someone told you someone had a gun that wasn't out in the open would you really trust that said person didn't have one? come on your stretching it if you say yesBentleyspop said:
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.
But its all a mute point anyway. He had a knife. Knives are deadly.
He was asked for over a minute on video to drop said knife (and who knows for how long before the video started).
He approached the officers with the knife in his hand.
And yet, the media titles are still going to spread this like a homophobic hate murder.
Now for Canada, I found it virtually impossible to figure out what the numbers even are just for shootings in general. I'm sure it is lower because of the obvious fact of the general population difference, 320+ million in the US compared to 36+ million in Canada.
https://news.vice.com/article/its-impossible-to-find-out-exactly-how-many-people-are-shot-by-cops-in-canada
I do continue to agree with you on the training aspect because law enforcement definitely needs training, training and more training, but let's be a little less quick to call it abuse just because a cop shot somebody.
And for those who say "just don't do it and you won't be shot" - that's so totally ridiculous as to not even justify a response, but for the sake of it, most people who engage in these behaviours ("suicide by cop") are pretty desperate, aren't thinking particularly clearly, and may indeed have their own death as a goal. That doesn't mean that the police should be willing participants in that. Emergency services intervene in suicide attempts many times a day; this is just one form of that.
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Loloftenreading said:
I didn't call it abuse. I said that if the officers are not being trained appropriately in methods to deal with these situations then the departments are negligent, because there's no way to argue that there aren't well recognized methods out there to handle these situations, which are not particularly rare.tbergs said:
According to WaPo there were 111 shootings by police of people armed with knives in 2016. The Guardian says the number is 159. A pretty big difference, but at least we have an idea of the statistics. Unfortunately I can't find anywhere in any data that indicates how many encounters police have with people wielding knives, which would at least provide some perspective to how frequently it ends in a fatal shooting.oftenreading said:
I'll just come back to my point - properly trained police officers know how to deal with the situation, and it isn't just repeatedly commanding "drop the knife", and then shooting the guy. You think Canadian cops don't face individuals with knives or other potential weapons fairly frequently? They do; they just typically respond differently, and shoot fewer people.mace1229 said:
What I thought too. Especially if they were reported to have a knife and a gun, and they are clearly wielding a knife, I wouldn't assume they isn't a gun just because I can't see it.pjhawks said:
what with x-ray vision? how could they tell, after it was reported the person had a gun, that the gun wasn't concealed on the victim? if someone told you someone had a gun that wasn't out in the open would you really trust that said person didn't have one? come on your stretching it if you say yesBentleyspop said:
My guess is that the officer could clearly see that this person did not have a gun. Reported or not. If he could not see this then maybe he needs to have his eyes examined.pjhawks said:
but the original report said the person had a knife and a gun. they refused to drop the knife. do you want to let someone reportedly who has a gun to continue to come at you? can you make that distinction when your in the line of fire?Bentleyspop said:
My commentary is similar to the above poster. It's a shame that this person had to die. Where were the tasers? Where was common sense? Was this police officer seriously afraid of this particular person wielding a pocket knife? If so than maybe being a police officer isn't the right vocation for him.oftenreading said:
It shouldn't need to be said again, but I guess it does. There are significantly more effective ways for the police to deal with situations like this that don't end in death. They require better training and a totally different mindset, and its negligence that they aren't being employed.tbergs said:
No commentary, but yet you post this in the police abuse thread? Do you have an opinion? I don't see abuse here. It seems clear this is a suicide by cop. Nice hot topic headline though. That will get the clicks for buzzfeed.Bentleyspop said:The Student President Of Georgia Tech's Pride Alliance Was Shot And Killed By A Campus Police Officer
With that said, I am wondering what type of equipment those officers carry and if they have tasers. In situations like this, it's not uncommon to have a secondary officer with taser and the main contact with gun drawn. All of us could play what if here I guess. Maybe the officer could have done some more talking to try and dissuade the behavior.
There has to be a way to change the situation to avoid the "suicide by cop".
Better and different training could help along with a different mindset.
If the kid did indeed have a gun in his hand and was threatening people then I don't blame the office for the outcome.
But its all a mute point anyway. He had a knife. Knives are deadly.
He was asked for over a minute on video to drop said knife (and who knows for how long before the video started).
He approached the officers with the knife in his hand.
And yet, the media titles are still going to spread this like a homophobic hate murder.
Now for Canada, I found it virtually impossible to figure out what the numbers even are just for shootings in general. I'm sure it is lower because of the obvious fact of the general population difference, 320+ million in the US compared to 36+ million in Canada.
https://news.vice.com/article/its-impossible-to-find-out-exactly-how-many-people-are-shot-by-cops-in-canada
I do continue to agree with you on the training aspect because law enforcement definitely needs training, training and more training, but let's be a little less quick to call it abuse just because a cop shot somebody.
And for those who say "just don't do it and you won't be shot" - that's so totally ridiculous as to not even justify a response, but for the sake of it, most people who engage in these behaviours ("suicide by cop") are pretty desperate, aren't thinking particularly clearly, and may indeed have their own death as a goal. That doesn't mean that the police should be willing participants in that. Emergency services intervene in suicide attempts many times a day; this is just one form of that.
Mmm Hmm. There you have it. The poor and desperate person crosses path with eager cop ready to accommodate.
Read tberg's post. He's been a moderate on this topic for as long as I can recall. You're so busy crucifying the cop and their 'poor' tactics... you haven't even stopped to think for a second how traumatic that incident might have been for them and how they might be dealing with that right now and in the future.
It is too bad that someone would get to that point in their life where they do something like this... but the result is hardly the fault of the officer placed in that situation.
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