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PiKA2001 11-26-2014 03:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KDCat (Post 2300842)
Darion Johnson and Darren Wilson are the only two people who saw the whole thing.

The other witnesses corroborate both of their stories. They are all over the place. It's not an either/or.

This is really a swearing contest between Wilson and Johnson.

And that is exactly what I meant when I said you can't put all your faith in trust in the testimonies in this case. What is telling is the evidence.

Quote:

Originally Posted by KDCat (Post 2300844)
Pot doesn't make people charge cops with their head down.

Not sure what you are getting at but someone putting their head down when charging at something is not uncommon at all.

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPhil (Post 2300835)
After watching The View, some of the biggest things to come from this:

1. Police need cameras and recorders on uniforms to protect themselves and the public at all times.

2. The public needs to know more about law enforcement training and the policies regarding use of "force", use of "deadly force", and firearm use. Most states have this information available online. This also highlights why officers cannot shoot to warn or injure, as depicted on shows like Criminal Minds.

3. Not all officers have tasers and not all members of the public agree with the use of tasers. We can't have it both ways. Either pepper spray, taser, baton(?), or gun. Some police departments carry multiple methods. That doesn't mean they will have access to every method during a physical altercation. I don't want an officer dying because the officer couldn't access the taser during an altercation and was afraid to use the police gun.

1. I'm a supporter of body cameras and recorders. I have several peers that have their own that they bring to work with them even though their agency doesn't mandate cameras or recorders. It's a great CYA measure in cases of false accusations or reports of misconduct. A lot of officers and unions are against body cams for fear that they will be used by management against officers for petty reasons (I.E. unauthorized smoke break or sitting down for a lunch) as well as privacy issues. Everything recorded should be subject to FOIA so the idea of someone requesting my recorder footage of a non incident day creeps me out but if at the end of the day it saves my career and reputation I feel it's worth it.

2. I'm not holding my breath that the public will self educate themselves on this. The things that people think the police can or can't do sometimes scare me, other times it just makes me laugh. As I've said, as long as we have the entertainment industry churning out cop dramas and action movies people will continue to be misinformed.

3. Tasers were brought onto the scene as being the magic less than deadly force solution for law enforcement but it hasn't been the case. There have been deaths and serious injuries resulting in taser use, and on the opposite spectrum I've seen police videos where a suspect is tased 6-7 times and is still up and fighting with police. There are also a lot of rules of when and not to use a taser. Just a few months ago my agency changed the taser policy so it's advised not to use the taser while the subject is standing on a hard surface or in the position to fall down and hit his head on something, so that itself is quite limiting.

PiKA2001 11-26-2014 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by StealthMode (Post 2300794)
My computer froze and my entire post got deleted. :mad:

TL;DR--What makes you feel #4? I'm incredibly surprised to see that comment because every single person I've encountered and comment I've read indicates people feel Wilson should have used a non-lethal way to stop Brown so I can't imagine where that comes from. Care to elaborate?

Read the blog post I linked.

It comes from the amount of ridiculous, unrealistic statements I've read about what Wilson should and/or should not have done. People lay blame on Wilson for defending himself but no one bats an eye about Brown going for Wilsons gun in the first place. I took a "wait and see" approach to all of this but as more evidence that was brought to the GJ is now out in the public the continued, and in some circles expanded, martyring of Brown is getting annoying.


https://www.thepolicewifelifeblog.co...ed-up-for-that

DrPhil 11-26-2014 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2300856)
And that is exactly what I meant when I said you can't put all your faith in trust in the testimonies in this case. What is telling is the evidence.


Not sure what you are getting at but someone putting their head down when charging at something is not uncommon at all.



1. I'm a supporter of body cameras and recorders. I have several peers that have their own that they bring to work with them even though their agency doesn't mandate cameras or recorders. It's a great CYA measure in cases of false accusations or reports of misconduct. A lot of officers and unions are against body cams for fear that they will be used by management against officers for petty reasons (I.E. unauthorized smoke break or sitting down for a lunch) as well as privacy issues. Everything recorded should be subject to FOIA so the idea of someone requesting my recorder footage of a non incident day creeps me out but if at the end of the day it saves my career and reputation I feel it's worth it.

2. I'm not holding my breath that the public will self educate themselves on this. The things that people think the police can or can't do sometimes scare me, other times it just makes me laugh. As I've said, as long as we have the entertainment industry churning out cop dramas and action movies people will continue to be misinformed.

3. Tasers were brought onto the scene as being the magic less than deadly force solution for law enforcement but it hasn't been the case. There have been deaths and serious injuries resulting in taser use, and on the opposite spectrum I've seen police videos where a suspect is tased 6-7 times and is still up and fighting with police. There are also a lot of rules of when and not to use a taser. Just a few months ago my agency changed the taser policy so it's advised not to use the taser while the subject is standing on a hard surface or in the position to fall down and hit his head on something, so that itself is quite limiting.

Exactly.

Like you said, tasers aren't 100%. They sometimes result in death. Some suspects aren't stopped through taser (that includes suspects on "bath salts," etc.).

This is all way more complex than most people in the public recognize. That complexity doesn't mean officers are never in the wrong. That complexity doesn't mean officers don't respond differently based on factors such as gender, race, etc. It means that we don't always know what happened and we don't always know who was in the "wrong".

KDCat 11-26-2014 04:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2300856)
And that is exactly what I meant when I said you can't put all your faith in trust in the testimonies in this case. What is telling is the evidence.


Physical evidence is great, but it only goes so far. It can tell us that Brown was shot in the hand by the wound on his hand. It can tell us that something happened at the car because Brown's blood was in the car and on the gun. It can tell us that Wilson was in a struggle because he had a bruise on his face. It can tell us that Brown was facing Wilson when he was killed because the entrance/exit wounds are consistent with Brown facing Wilson.

It doesn't tell us whether Brown grabbed for Wilson's gun. It doesn't tell us whether Brown was charging Wilson or not when he was shot. For those determinations, you have to choose Wilson's testimony or Johnson's testimony.

KDCat 11-26-2014 04:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPhil (Post 2300858)
Exactly.

Like you said, tasers aren't 100%. They sometimes result in death. Some suspects aren't stopped through taser (that includes suspects on "bath salts," etc.).

This is all way more complex than most people in the public recognize. That complexity doesn't mean officers are never in the wrong. That complexity doesn't mean officers don't respond differently based on factors such as gender, race, etc. It means that we don't always know what happened and we don't always know who was in the "wrong".

Tasers aren't 100% but they are MUCH safer than handguns. They cause fewer deaths that guns or physical take-downs of suspects. The use of tasers results in fewer injuries to officers and to arrestees as the result of physical altercations. They can be abused, but so can many other police tactics.

DrPhil 11-26-2014 04:44 PM

The point is that tasers are not always the savior for suspects and officers. People who believe they are a 100% alternative need to know that. Not every law enforcement officer and member of public has faith in tasers.

Tom Earp 11-26-2014 04:48 PM

Have any of you been in a COPs shoes? COPs are trained to shoot at the mass=biggest part of the body. TV in the leg and shoulder is true B S!

Not all COPs are supplied with tasers or body cams because they cannot afford it.

I was never trained to profile anyone, just the ones that broe the law.

Many of you want to talk the talk but have walked the walk.

Second guessing is easy or spouting stuff is easy.

Now the folks of Ferguson are looking at what is left for them now!

Phrozen Sands 11-26-2014 06:10 PM

So we have an unarmed black kid, riddled with 12 bullets, dead and left in the middle of the street for over 4-hours. On the flip side of that coin, we have a white guy who decided to shoot up a movie theater, armed with 600 something rounds of ammunition, a shotgun, two handguns, and several semi-automatics, with orange dyed hair. He's still living. Lol! Gotta love white America.

Munchkin03 11-26-2014 06:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tom Earp (Post 2300867)
Have any of you been in a COPs shoes? COPs are trained to shoot at the mass=biggest part of the body. TV in the leg and shoulder is true B S!

Not all COPs are supplied with tasers or body cams because they cannot afford it.

I was never trained to profile anyone, just the ones that broe the law.

Many of you want to talk the talk but have walked the walk.

Second guessing is easy or spouting stuff is easy.

Now the folks of Ferguson are looking at what is left for them now!

Happy Thanksgiving, Tom!

PiKA2001 11-26-2014 06:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Phrozen Sands (Post 2300870)
So we have an unarmed black kid, riddled with 12 bullets, dead and left in the middle of the street for over 4-hours. On the flip side of that coin, we have a white guy who decided to shoot up a movie theater, armed with 600 something rounds of ammunition, a shotgun, two handguns, and several semi-automatics, with orange dyed hair. He's still living. Lol! Gotta love white America.

Gingers are a rare species, us whites need to keep them alive at all costs.








Apples and oranges dude. If Holmes didn't practically give himself up to police when they showed up on scene and put up a fight he would have been killed by police IMO.

Phrozen Sands 11-26-2014 06:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2300874)
Gingers are a rare species, us whites need to keep them alive at all costs.








Apples and oranges dude. If Holmes didn't practically give himself up to police when they showed up on scene and put up a fight he would have been killed by police IMO.

I'm glad you posted "IMO", "dude".
Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2300857)
martyring of Brown is getting annoying.

And for the record, "IMO" your posts are getting annoying.

PiKA2001 11-26-2014 06:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KDCat (Post 2300862)
Physical evidence is great, but it only goes so far. It can tell us that Brown was shot in the hand by the wound on his hand. It can tell us that something happened at the car because Brown's blood was in the car and on the gun. It can tell us that Wilson was in a struggle because he had a bruise on his face. It can tell us that Brown was facing Wilson when he was killed because the entrance/exit wounds are consistent with Brown facing Wilson.

It doesn't tell us whether Brown grabbed for Wilson's gun. It doesn't tell us whether Brown was charging Wilson or not when he was shot. For those determinations, you have to choose Wilson's testimony or Johnson's testimony.

You don't HAVE to choose either testimony. There were several other witness testimonies and I would think all of the testimonies, no matter how contradictory, would be weighted along side the physical evidence. I don't understand why you want to take Johnsons testimony alone as the gospel.
Once again I ask this question- Wasn't Johnson (the friend) the one who initially told investigators and reporters that Wilson shot Brown in the back while Brown was running away? If so, that would really make me question the accuracy of his GJ testimony.

PiKA2001 11-26-2014 06:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Phrozen Sands (Post 2300875)
I'm glad you posted "IMO", "dude".

And for the record, "IMO" your posts are getting annoying.

Oh I'm sorry, can't handle a differing opinion? Get the fuck off the internet then.

Phrozen Sands 11-26-2014 06:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2300877)
Oh I'm sorry, can't handle a differing opinion? Get the fuck off the internet then.

Lol what's the matter? You pissed? I'd like to see you make me get off the internet, you piece of shit.

DrPhil 11-26-2014 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Phrozen Sands (Post 2300875)
I'm glad you posted "IMO", "dude".

That shooter did give himself up to law enforcement, correct? Law enforcement would not shoot if he was no longer posing a threat to others and himself.

Law enforcement aren't supposed to shoot in retaliation or as payback. It is tempting.


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