Police abuse

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  • Ledbetterman10Ledbetterman10 Posts: 16,951
    static111 said:
    Literally no one has said that around here.  What has been said over and over is that there is racism inherent in our policing system and that for some reason(racism) cops are more scared of their lives at a traffic stop with People of Color than they are with white mass shooters.  People the. Bend over backwards to come up with any theory they can that doesn’t point to the issue, which is systemic racism and bad policing.  Then obfuscate the facts with made up anecdotes about hunting people...
    That's fair enough, I attributed a LeBron James quote to this place based on a similar sentiments, which I shouldn't do.




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  • Halifax2TheMaxHalifax2TheMax Posts: 40,641
    That's fair enough, I attributed a LeBron James quote to this place based on a similar sentiments, which I shouldn't do.




    Is that not true? Are you that fucking blind? To inherent, systemic racism through all levels of ‘Murican society? From birth to death, no less.
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  • Ledbetterman10Ledbetterman10 Posts: 16,951
    Is that not true? Are you that fucking blind? To inherent, systemic racism through all levels of ‘Murican society? From birth to death, no less.

    Is it true that black people are, as James says here, "literally hunted EVERYDAY/EVERYTIME we step foot outside the comfort of our homes!"? No, it's not.  

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  • static111static111 Posts: 4,889
    nicknyr15 said:
    Ridiculous. 
    Do you think there is a police violence problem in this country especially when it comes to dealing with young Black males?
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  • static111static111 Posts: 4,889

    Is it true that black people are, as James says here, "literally hunted EVERYDAY/EVERYTIME we step foot outside the comfort of our homes!"? No, it's not.  

    I can’t speak for the truth of any African American and what it is like to live in a nation founded on bondage and brutal racism.
    Scio me nihil scire

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  • static111static111 Posts: 4,889
    That's fair enough, I attributed a LeBron James quote to this place based on a similar sentiments, which I shouldn't do.




    So this dude was literally hunted in this specific example, albeit not by cops, but that’s the truth he went out for a jog and was hunted for some unknown reason...oh yeah anti black racism 
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  • Merkin BallerMerkin Baller Posts: 12,154

    Is it true that black people are, as James says here, "literally hunted EVERYDAY/EVERYTIME we step foot outside the comfort of our homes!"? No, it's not.  


    Is something Lebron said in reaction to the horrific Arbery murder / cover up / video leak really the hill you're going to fight on right now? 

  • mace1229mace1229 Posts: 9,629
    Did I say that? Referencing your bolded last two sentences.
    You didn't say it. But that was the claim someone else made that prompted my reply to which you asked for step by step clarification of why he was shot. I took that to mean you agreed with the previous post of him being shot for tags. If you disagree with that statement, then I misread into your inquiry of asking for a break down of why he was shot. 
  • Lerxst1992Lerxst1992 Posts: 7,174
    CM189191 said:


    This is clearly not anything like the Floyd murder.
    Yes, it is

    The victim had two outstanding warrants, physically resisted arrest and lunged into his car.
    This is not a license for police to summarily execute a citizen.

    The cops had every right  to suspect the victim had a gun in the car.
    1) no they didn't
    2) cops think everyone has a gun

    One of the outstanding warrants involved illegal carry.
    No, the outstanding warrant was for failure to appear in court.  Neither of these are violent crimes.

    In the heat of battle, the cop made a terrible mistake.
    The cop was negligent and reckless

    But the dangerous conditions were created by the victim.
    No they weren't.  Cops started the interaction.  Where unable to control the situation.  And escalated unnecessarily.  

    Where is the black community to admit breaking the law and resisting arrest is not acceptable conduct?
    Police aren't supposed to murder guilty people, either. 


    sorry, but you’re response is riddled with inaccuracies. How badly do y’all want trump to be president again


    ” Minneapolis police said he had carried a pistol without a permit and had run from officers last June. ” and he missed a court appearance. 

    At 20, certainly not a law abiding citizen.

    He didn’t deserve to die, but resisting arrest, carrying a gun, and not appearing for court dates comes with risk. It’s time for the black community to meet the police halfway here. Otherwise, trump will turn this into another defund the police disaster.
  • Ledbetterman10Ledbetterman10 Posts: 16,951
    static111 said:
    So this dude was literally hunted in this specific example, albeit not by cops, but that’s the truth he went out for a jog and was hunted for some unknown reason...oh yeah anti black racism 
    He was. It was completely racist. But "literally hunted EVERYDAY/EVERYTIME we step foot outside the comfort of our homes" is still fear-mongering hyperbole. So when Halifax asked "Is that not true?," I said it's not. 
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  • mace1229mace1229 Posts: 9,629
    static111 said:
    Literally no one has said that around here.  What has been said over and over is that there is racism inherent in our policing system and that for some reason(racism) cops are more scared of their lives at a traffic stop with People of Color than they are with white mass shooters.  People the. Bend over backwards to come up with any theory they can that doesn’t point to the issue, which is systemic racism and bad policing.  Then obfuscate the facts with made up anecdotes about hunting people...
    Some did say they didnt beliebve it was an accident, that the cop didn't really mistake her gun for the taser. And if you say that, arent you saying that cops go out wanting to murder black people? Because if you believe she knew it was a gun and knowingly pulled the trigger to kill him, that would be murder. I don;t see the difference in saying she's lying about how it happened and saying she went out to murder him. 
  • cblock4lifecblock4life Posts: 1,789
    First, most whites are afraid of black people (won’t admit it but they are). Second, most white people can’t relate nor communicate with black people. Third, the weight difference between a taser and gun is fairly significant.  You can scream taser, taser, taser all you want but she was ready to shoot regardless. She’s right handed, dominant side for her gun placement.  They’re all full of bullshit.  Again, with the exception of a few and I mean very few, cops are egotistical, power hungry assholes. 
  • nicknyr15nicknyr15 Posts: 8,875
    static111 said:
    Do you think there is a police violence problem in this country especially when it comes to dealing with young Black males?
    I have no desire to go back and forth on this issue with you. No disrespect, honestly. We will never see eye to and there’s nothing wrong with that. I respect your opinion, passion and the way you communicate your point, unlike others here.  I’m with Ledbetterman10 on this one. 
  • BentleyspopBentleyspop Craft Beer Brewery, Colorado Posts: 11,109
    And now the police officer has resigned. 
  • Merkin BallerMerkin Baller Posts: 12,154
    And now the police officer has resigned. 
    & the chief as well, according to the NYT. 
  • Ledbetterman10Ledbetterman10 Posts: 16,951
    nicknyr15 said:
    I have no desire to go back and forth on this issue with you. No disrespect, honestly. We will never see eye to and there’s nothing wrong with that. I respect your opinion, passion and the way you communicate your point, unlike others here.  I’m with Ledbetterman10 on this one. 
    Well I actually pretty much agree that there's a problem with how cops interact with black guys. But I also don't think every case is the same. That just because a black person gets killed by police, that it's because systemic racism, etc. Yesterday, someone compared this situation with Wright to Philando Castile, which I thought was a terrible comparison. But some people just see a black person killed by white cop, and that's all they need to know. And again, as I've said, he shouldn't have been shot and that cop is the posterchild for bad policing (racially motivated or not). But he also shouldn't have resisted. He'd be alive if he didn't try to jump back in his car. 

    A few months back, when the NFL cared about social justice, they were posting on their Instagram pictures of black victims of police brutality. It showed their picture, their name, and said #saytheirstories. But then one of them was Rayshard Brooks, the guy that stole the cops' taser and got shot because of it. Should he be lumped in with Breonna Taylor? I don't think he should. 
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  • jerparker20jerparker20 St. Paul, MN Posts: 2,522
    And now the police officer has resigned. 
    As did the police chief. 
  • tbergstbergs Posts: 10,166
    First, most whites are afraid of black people (won’t admit it but they are). Second, most white people can’t relate nor communicate with black people. Third, the weight difference between a taser and gun is fairly significant.  You can scream taser, taser, taser all you want but she was ready to shoot regardless. She’s right handed, dominant side for her gun placement.  They’re all full of bullshit.  Again, with the exception of a few and I mean very few, cops are egotistical, power hungry assholes. 
    Under stress and adrenaline rush, the brain doesn't quite register things the same. Don't take my word though, the research is out there. That's why they hammer repetition in trainings, to eliminate brain fog. A 26 year vet maybe shouldn't have been allowed to be in that type of situation anymore. She should face manslaughter charges accordingly.
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • Ledbetterman10Ledbetterman10 Posts: 16,951
    And now the police officer has resigned. 
    I wonder how she'll be charged. In the U.S., negligent homicide is considered, by statute, to be involuntary manslaughter. So that'd be my guess.
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  • cblock4lifecblock4life Posts: 1,789
    edited April 2021
    And now the police officer has resigned. 
    They’re resigning to try to save their retirement.  Just like Chauvin got a divorce and she got most of the money to protect it and how they make sure he’s wearing an extra baggy suit (poor officer lost so much weight). Please people don’t be delusional.  These are scum moves by scum people. Don’t for once think that what they are doing is for any other reason than saving their own interests. Whites have been hanging, burning, shooting blacks for centuries and some of you think it’s all the black folks fault. Officers are taught and told they’re entitled to act like assholes.  
    Post edited by cblock4life on
  • tbergstbergs Posts: 10,166
    They’re resigning to try to save their retirement.  Just like Chauvin got a divorce and she got most of the money to protect it and how they make sure he’s wearing an extra baggy suit (poor officer lost so much weight). Please people don’t be delusional.  These are scum moves by scum people. Don’t for once think that what they are doing is for any other reason than saving their own interests. Whites have been hanging, burning, shooting whites for centuries and some of you think it’s all the black folks fault. Officers are taught and told they’re entitled to act like assholes.  
    Is every cop a racist asshole?
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • mace1229mace1229 Posts: 9,629
    tbergs said:
    Is every cop a racist asshole?
    He said "with the exception of a few and I mean very few." 
  • FiveBelowFiveBelow Posts: 1,315
    static111 said:
    Do you think there is a police violence problem in this country especially when it comes to dealing with young Black males?
    I don’t think anyone is claiming it isn’t a problem, it just doesn’t exist at the level that those who sensationalize every incident think it does. Do you know the name of a single white person who has been killed under similar circumstances? I don’t, but that is only because it isn’t deemed headline worthy and subsequently blasted over every news outlet and social media platform. Now do you honestly think that the same reactions, mistakes or mis judgments by police do not occur with every other race? Of course they do, the victims just don’t become household names. If we want to get to the root of the problem race should not be the determining factor as to whether a story is headline worthy or not. While there is no question some who wear a uniform are racist or choose to profile specific races, I do not think it is as common as it is being sold. Considering the number of interactions with police on a daily basis vs the number of these incidents, I think it is unfair to ignore that almost all interactions end without incident. So it begs the question, does choosing to only examine a portion of the problem seem like the correct way to solve the problem? 
  • cblock4lifecblock4life Posts: 1,789
    mace1229 said:
    He said "with the exception of a few and I mean very few." 
    “She said” (not he) nothing about racism.  I said what mace repeated (thanks!) but it was about police generally being assholes to everyone. I have yet to meet a cop who hasn’t hit on me (some to the point of frightening me) or let me go for whatever violation I committed and I don’t dress provocatively or flirt, but I’m white. I should respect people like that? And I’ve said it before on here....I have cops in the family and they all agree that it’s taught to them in order to seem more intimidating.  Some of us do know what we’re talking about. 
  • Halifax2TheMaxHalifax2TheMax Posts: 40,641
    mace1229 said:
    You didn't say it. But that was the claim someone else made that prompted my reply to which you asked for step by step clarification of why he was shot. I took that to mean you agreed with the previous post of him being shot for tags. If you disagree with that statement, then I misread into your inquiry of asking for a break down of why he was shot. 
    So, why was he shot? Three cops, all armed, one on the passenger side, one in process of handcuffing the murder victim and one coming up from behind to interject herself, who eventually panics, fires her weapon and kills him. Why was he shot?
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  • Halifax2TheMaxHalifax2TheMax Posts: 40,641
    I wonder how she'll be charged. In the U.S., negligent homicide is considered, by statute, to be involuntary manslaughter. So that'd be my guess.
    Coroner listed cause of death as "homicide." Maybe to legally initiate an investigation? Because we all know, shootings of unarmed black men get thoroughly investigated.
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  • static111static111 Posts: 4,889
    mace1229 said:
    Some did say they didnt beliebve it was an accident, that the cop didn't really mistake her gun for the taser. And if you say that, arent you saying that cops go out wanting to murder black people? Because if you believe she knew it was a gun and knowingly pulled the trigger to kill him, that would be murder. I don;t see the difference in saying she's lying about how it happened and saying she went out to murder him. 
    Kind of like how people  say I feel threatened or I was In fear of my life to justify some action that they know is wrong.  I’m more in the camp of give the victim the benefit of the doubt than the perpetrator when it comes to cases like these.
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  • vant0037vant0037 Posts: 6,154
    Is anyone interesting in discussing this, or just arguing a point to win?

    Let's strip away everything contextual about this: the officer's experience, the victim's race and warrants, social media.  Take it all away.

    Look at the raw facts of the case:

    An officer - apparently accidentally - mistook a lethal weapon for a non-lethal one and shot someone who by rights she didn't think needed to be shot.  You're left with a very poorly trained or poorly performing officer and a dead 20 year old who didn't need to be killed.  That should piss you off, and outrage you because this is precisely the opposite of what we want in police officers.  There are certain professions where some mistakes can't be tolerated, if only because the stakes are usually very high.  Airline pilots, doctors, and people who carry deadly weapons as tools of the trade.  Cops do NOT have a safe or easy job.  They go into shitty situations and have lots of stress and tough calls to make.  But until they are drafted involuntarily, it is a position that they choose to be in.  If its a voluntary choice, then they need to be expected to be held to a higher standard of precision.  In short, you cannot make a mistake like the one made here.  Let's all agree on that.

    Let's agree that this cop shouldn't have a job anymore (she doesn't), at minimum.  Let's also agree that, if you review Minnesota's applicable laws on negligent homicide, it probably warrants a criminal investigation into her conduct.  I've looked at the statute, and I can make a case that what we know to be true from this video COULD meet the elements of a negligent homicide/manslaughter etc.  I make no guess as to whether charges will be filed or whether she could be convicted, but suffice it to say, an investigation is coming and justified.

    Now, add in the mountain of context:

    Daunte Wright had a criminal record, or at least, charges against him and warrants.  He had possessed a weapon before.  He probably wasn't, at all times in his life, a law abiding citizen. But in America, even murderers and pedophiles cannot be executed or killed outside of a state-sanctioned execution unless the officer's use of deadly force is authorized under state law. Again, looking at Minnesota's use-of-force statute, which was just revised in 2020 and applying it to the facts we know in this case, she simply wasn't authorized to use deadly force here.

    Daunte Wright was an African-American.  The officer was white.  Daunte Wright was attempting to flee, and there's no evidence that he was reaching for a gun.  You can reasonably infer that from the video and the officer's statements.

    Meanwhile, about 10 miles away, the biggest trial in Minnesota history - and perhaps the biggest trial involving an officer charged with murder in modern US history - was in its 3rd week.  There, the white officer was charged with killing an African-American man who also had a criminal history, but who, like Daunte Wright, probably wasn't a threat to the officer, or at least in a way that would warrant lethal force.

    So...

    We can debate all day about whether Lebron James is correct about black people being hunted or not, or semantically about whether Daunte Wright was a saint or not, or who said what or whether Trump is going to prove us all wrong.  Let's all take a deep breath a set our political views aside for a second and agree on what we all should be able to agree on.

    The bare facts of this killing should outrage you from a public safety standpoint.  Cops are humans but their margin for error has to be much, much smaller than this.  Let's agree on that.

    Let's all also agree that whatever our politics are, it might understandable why people are outraged by Daunte Wright's death, if only because the actors all look so familiar, and the facts of the killing are arguably just as egregious as the Floyd case or the Philando Castile case or the Eric Garner case or the Breonna Taylor case.  A black victim killed by an officer who was in most cases either white or a different color than the victim.  If you're white and having a hard time agreeing with that statement, consider at least, that you have not lived the black experience in America.  There are reams of studies and data that prove your white experience and your relationship with the criminal justice system is not the same as a person of colors.  Let's all agree that its possible that persons of color might have had different experiences in their lives with law enforcement.

    Are those positions so crazy?

    Apologies for the novel.  But the bickering about nitpicky little points seemed very beside the issue, when this case above many others seems so ripe for agreement that what the cop did - mistakenly or not - was really bad, perhaps criminally bad.
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  • static111static111 Posts: 4,889
    vant0037 said:
    Is anyone interesting in discussing this, or just arguing a point to win?

    Let's strip away everything contextual about this: the officer's experience, the victim's race and warrants, social media.  Take it all away.

    Look at the raw facts of the case:

    An officer - apparently accidentally - mistook a lethal weapon for a non-lethal one and shot someone who by rights she didn't think needed to be shot.  You're left with a very poorly trained or poorly performing officer and a dead 20 year old who didn't need to be killed.  That should piss you off, and outrage you because this is precisely the opposite of what we want in police officers.  There are certain professions where some mistakes can't be tolerated, if only because the stakes are usually very high.  Airline pilots, doctors, and people who carry deadly weapons as tools of the trade.  Cops do NOT have a safe or easy job.  They go into shitty situations and have lots of stress and tough calls to make.  But until they are drafted involuntarily, it is a position that they choose to be in.  If its a voluntary choice, then they need to be expected to be held to a higher standard of precision.  In short, you cannot make a mistake like the one made here.  Let's all agree on that.

    Let's agree that this cop shouldn't have a job anymore (she doesn't), at minimum.  Let's also agree that, if you review Minnesota's applicable laws on negligent homicide, it probably warrants a criminal investigation into her conduct.  I've looked at the statute, and I can make a case that what we know to be true from this video COULD meet the elements of a negligent homicide/manslaughter etc.  I make no guess as to whether charges will be filed or whether she could be convicted, but suffice it to say, an investigation is coming and justified.

    Now, add in the mountain of context:

    Daunte Wright had a criminal record, or at least, charges against him and warrants.  He had possessed a weapon before.  He probably wasn't, at all times in his life, a law abiding citizen. But in America, even murderers and pedophiles cannot be executed or killed outside of a state-sanctioned execution unless the officer's use of deadly force is authorized under state law. Again, looking at Minnesota's use-of-force statute, which was just revised in 2020 and applying it to the facts we know in this case, she simply wasn't authorized to use deadly force here.

    Daunte Wright was an African-American.  The officer was white.  Daunte Wright was attempting to flee, and there's no evidence that he was reaching for a gun.  You can reasonably infer that from the video and the officer's statements.

    Meanwhile, about 10 miles away, the biggest trial in Minnesota history - and perhaps the biggest trial involving an officer charged with murder in modern US history - was in its 3rd week.  There, the white officer was charged with killing an African-American man who also had a criminal history, but who, like Daunte Wright, probably wasn't a threat to the officer, or at least in a way that would warrant lethal force.

    So...

    We can debate all day about whether Lebron James is correct about black people being hunted or not, or semantically about whether Daunte Wright was a saint or not, or who said what or whether Trump is going to prove us all wrong.  Let's all take a deep breath a set our political views aside for a second and agree on what we all should be able to agree on.

    The bare facts of this killing should outrage you from a public safety standpoint.  Cops are humans but their margin for error has to be much, much smaller than this.  Let's agree on that.

    Let's all also agree that whatever our politics are, it might understandable why people are outraged by Daunte Wright's death, if only because the actors all look so familiar, and the facts of the killing are arguably just as egregious as the Floyd case or the Philando Castile case or the Eric Garner case or the Breonna Taylor case.  A black victim killed by an officer who was in most cases either white or a different color than the victim.  If you're white and having a hard time agreeing with that statement, consider at least, that you have not lived the black experience in America.  There are reams of studies and data that prove your white experience and your relationship with the criminal justice system is not the same as a person of colors.  Let's all agree that its possible that persons of color might have had different experiences in their lives with law enforcement.

    Are those positions so crazy?

    Apologies for the novel.  But the bickering about nitpicky little points seemed very beside the issue, when this case above many others seems so ripe for agreement that what the cop did - mistakenly or not - was really bad, perhaps criminally bad.
    Great post
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  • Merkin BallerMerkin Baller Posts: 12,154
    Well said @vant0037
This discussion has been closed.