Police abuse
Comments
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Thirty Bills Unpaid said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.0 -
Thirty Bills Unpaid said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Nobody is crucifying this cop, enough with the hysterics.
This isn't abuse, it's systemic failure.
Failure to properly train and equip officers for de-escalation tactics is more of an effect, not cause.
The cause of these failures is a police culture which doesn't value de-escalation, a culture with an "us against them" attitude to the core. Perhaps you remember Muskydan's ridiculous "us against them" rhetoric?
It's also caused by a failure of our society, by harbouring a "with them or against them" attitude that allows for so little analysis and critique of police behaviour as to essentially give them absolute impunity.
Yes, we are Monday morning quarterbacking, that's what rational beings in a civilized society do.
They analyze important events after the fact and they make determinations as to which judgements made in the moment were correct and effective, and which ones were wrong and ineffective or destructive, that way they can make improvements to systems and methods to get better results.
I don't know what you do, but can you imagine how quickly your "industry" would fall apart if your judgement (and all your associates') was suddenly beyond reproach??
Your attempts to stifle that rational discourse are not helping anyone. They aren't helping police and they aren't helping police victims, they just aren't helping society at all.
Until we admit that we CAN do better, we have no chance of making steps forward.
Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
old news but relevant:
Cop fired for not shooting armed suicidal suspect
"Such restraint should be praised not penalized. To tell a police officer -- when in doubt -- either shoot to kill or get fired, is a choice that no police officer should ever have to make and is a message that is wrong and should never be sent," said his attorney, Timothy O'Brien.
Cops are no longer trained to protect and serve. They are trained to view everything as a threat to be neutralized.
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dignin said:Thirty Bills Unpaid said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
This line: 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... was the one that irked me a bit.
'Willing participants'? Really? From my way of thinking they could just as easy be 'reluctant participants', but it's never framed that way from the hyper critics (or noted for that matter).
"My brain's a good brain!"0 -
oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.0 -
pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
rgambs said:pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.0 -
pjhawks said:rgambs said:pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.
What kind of smart policy and training would exclude the most effective non-lethal tool for controlling a threatening citizen??
Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
CM189191 said:old news but relevant:
Cop fired for not shooting armed suicidal suspect
"Such restraint should be praised not penalized. To tell a police officer -- when in doubt -- either shoot to kill or get fired, is a choice that no police officer should ever have to make and is a message that is wrong and should never be sent," said his attorney, Timothy O'Brien.
Cops are no longer trained to protect and serve. They are trained to view everything as a threat to be neutralized.
The whole point of shoot to kill (and yes, some will argue its shoot center mass, but thats basically the same thing) is two very simple reasons.
1- Never fire your weapon unless you intend to kill someone
2- Dont intend to kill someone unless you fear for your or someone else's safety
And I guess you could add a third of
3-if you are truly afraid for your life, I wouldnt want anything less than lethal force. Police have a right to protect themselves just like everyone else. Tasers dont always stop a guy with a knife. Especially someone on drugs, and they dont know the situation.
That's it. You bring in shoot to injure in the picture, then the next conversation is going to be "well I was aiming for his leg as he ran away, but missed and nailed him in the back. Sorry you're paralyzed for life now."Post edited by mace1229 on0 -
rgambs said:pjhawks said:rgambs said:pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.
What kind of smart policy and training would exclude the most effective non-lethal tool for controlling a threatening citizen??0 -
A lengthy article but highly relevant and full of interesting information.
https://www.apmreports.org/story/2017/05/05/police-de-escalation-training
34 states do not require police to have any training in de-escalation techniques. When a proposal requiring such training was put forward, police organizations opposed it, because they view it as unnecessary and a criticism of how they currently operate.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
pjhawks said:rgambs said:pjhawks said:rgambs said:pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.
What kind of smart policy and training would exclude the most effective non-lethal tool for controlling a threatening citizen??
They should.
Tasers and bodycams, it's the damn 21st century, we should act like it.Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
oftenreading said:A lengthy article but highly relevant and full of interesting information.
https://www.apmreports.org/story/2017/05/05/police-de-escalation-training
34 states do not require police to have any training in de-escalation techniques. When a proposal requiring such training was put forward, police organizations opposed it, because they view it as unnecessary and a criticism of how they currently operate.
Thanks Thirty!
I kid, of course, but I do think that we have issues in this country with blind devotion to authority.
One CAN criticize and work to improve authority systems without rebellion against them.Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
rgambs said:pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.
To use your words: enough with the hysterics.
(funny... eh... how one can exercise tactics that they also bemoan?)
"My brain's a good brain!"0 -
Thirty Bills Unpaid said:rgambs said:pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.
To use your words: enough with the hysterics.
(funny... eh... how one can exercise tactics that they also bemoan?)
Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
oftenreading said:A lengthy article but highly relevant and full of interesting information.
https://www.apmreports.org/story/2017/05/05/police-de-escalation-training
34 states do not require police to have any training in de-escalation techniques. When a proposal requiring such training was put forward, police organizations opposed it, because they view it as unnecessary and a criticism of how they currently operate.
With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0 -
mace1229 said:CM189191 said:old news but relevant:
Cop fired for not shooting armed suicidal suspect
"Such restraint should be praised not penalized. To tell a police officer -- when in doubt -- either shoot to kill or get fired, is a choice that no police officer should ever have to make and is a message that is wrong and should never be sent," said his attorney, Timothy O'Brien.
Cops are no longer trained to protect and serve. They are trained to view everything as a threat to be neutralized.
The whole point of shoot to kill (and yes, some will argue its shoot center mass, but thats basically the same thing) is two very simple reasons.
1- Never fire your weapon unless you intend to kill someone
2- Dont intend to kill someone unless you fear for your or someone else's safety
And I guess you could add a third of
3-if you are truly afraid for your life, I wouldnt want anything less than lethal force. Police have a right to protect themselves just like everyone else. Tasers dont always stop a guy with a knife. Especially someone on drugs, and they dont know the situation.
That's it. You bring in shoot to injure in the picture, then the next conversation is going to be "well I was aiming for his leg as he ran away, but missed and nailed him in the back. Sorry you're paralyzed for life now."
But since you brought it up, yes I would like police to stop shooting people and asking questions later. Why can't the US figure this out?US police kill more in days than other countries do in years
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/09/the-counted-police-killings-us-vs-other-countries
0 -
rgambs said:Thirty Bills Unpaid said:rgambs said:pjhawks said:oftenreading said:tbergs said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:pjhawks said:Bentleyspop said:oftenreading said:tbergs said: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.
Shoot to kill.
What they could have done is a different story.
I've posted it several times (much to Thirty's chagrin I'm sure), but nobody has been interested.
The Salt Lake City implemented a training program that runs through levels of force and de-escalation tactics.
In this case, if talking to the citizen was not proving effective, they likely would have given ground and attempted to subdue with taser before resorting to firing a service pistol.
To use your words: enough with the hysterics.
(funny... eh... how one can exercise tactics that they also bemoan?)
Lol. Well that's nicer at least.
I'm not sure what this situation was going to amount to if the cops had tactfully retreated. It might have finished more peacefully... who knows?
Regardless of any tactical models adopted by police at some point... cops will be placed in a position where they will need to defend themselves. We are debating where that line should be. I don't think it should be after they have unsuccessfully managed to unarm and detain someone after issuing commands and hand to hand combat fails.
"My brain's a good brain!"0 -
CM189191 said:mace1229 said:CM189191 said:old news but relevant:
Cop fired for not shooting armed suicidal suspect
"Such restraint should be praised not penalized. To tell a police officer -- when in doubt -- either shoot to kill or get fired, is a choice that no police officer should ever have to make and is a message that is wrong and should never be sent," said his attorney, Timothy O'Brien.
Cops are no longer trained to protect and serve. They are trained to view everything as a threat to be neutralized.
The whole point of shoot to kill (and yes, some will argue its shoot center mass, but thats basically the same thing) is two very simple reasons.
1- Never fire your weapon unless you intend to kill someone
2- Dont intend to kill someone unless you fear for your or someone else's safety
And I guess you could add a third of
3-if you are truly afraid for your life, I wouldnt want anything less than lethal force. Police have a right to protect themselves just like everyone else. Tasers dont always stop a guy with a knife. Especially someone on drugs, and they dont know the situation.
That's it. You bring in shoot to injure in the picture, then the next conversation is going to be "well I was aiming for his leg as he ran away, but missed and nailed him in the back. Sorry you're paralyzed for life now."
But since you brought it up, yes I would like police to stop shooting people and asking questions later. Why can't the US figure this out?US police kill more in days than other countries do in years
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/09/the-counted-police-killings-us-vs-other-countries
And what is this saying?
Is it saying the US is fraught with bloodthirsty police that love shooting people? Or is it speaking to the 'tip' of the problem which is the manifestation of brutal behaviours- borne from a multitude of social issues- that result in police encounters?
Again... we all like to point our fingers at the police, but we rarely point our fingers at ourselves. The US citizens are responsible for the inequities prevalent in their country that result in criminalized people encountering police. Get behind solid social programming instead of things like military might and many of these situations will not present themselves. And I could go on, but won't.
Outside of the outliers... ultimately, police are just people like us: doing a job and wanting to come home after doing their job.
"My brain's a good brain!"0 -
Thirty Bills Unpaid said:CM189191 said:mace1229 said:CM189191 said:old news but relevant:
Cop fired for not shooting armed suicidal suspect
"Such restraint should be praised not penalized. To tell a police officer -- when in doubt -- either shoot to kill or get fired, is a choice that no police officer should ever have to make and is a message that is wrong and should never be sent," said his attorney, Timothy O'Brien.
Cops are no longer trained to protect and serve. They are trained to view everything as a threat to be neutralized.
The whole point of shoot to kill (and yes, some will argue its shoot center mass, but thats basically the same thing) is two very simple reasons.
1- Never fire your weapon unless you intend to kill someone
2- Dont intend to kill someone unless you fear for your or someone else's safety
And I guess you could add a third of
3-if you are truly afraid for your life, I wouldnt want anything less than lethal force. Police have a right to protect themselves just like everyone else. Tasers dont always stop a guy with a knife. Especially someone on drugs, and they dont know the situation.
That's it. You bring in shoot to injure in the picture, then the next conversation is going to be "well I was aiming for his leg as he ran away, but missed and nailed him in the back. Sorry you're paralyzed for life now."
But since you brought it up, yes I would like police to stop shooting people and asking questions later. Why can't the US figure this out?US police kill more in days than other countries do in years
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/09/the-counted-police-killings-us-vs-other-countries
And what is this saying?
Is it saying the US is fraught with bloodthirsty police that love shooting people? Or is it speaking to the 'tip' of the problem which is the manifestation of brutal behaviours- borne from a multitude of social issues- that result in police encounters?
Again... we all like to point our fingers at the police, but we rarely point our fingers at ourselves. The US citizens are responsible for the inequities prevalent in their country that result in criminalized people encountering police. Get behind solid social programming instead of things like military might and many of these situations will not present themselves. And I could go on, but won't.
Outside of the outliers... ultimately, police are just people like us: doing a job and wanting to come home after doing their job.
Everyone knows and agrees that poverty causes these issues, but poverty has never been eradicated in human history, while implementation of bodycams and increasing training are simple snap of the finger solutions that will cause immediate improvement.Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0
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