Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was no way that man was coherent enough to get in the car and go peacefully. It will be interesting to see what his background is
Drugs I bet
Duh...he was rambling about needing detox.
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that he was in the midst of some drug induced psychosis, but that doesn't warrant walking up and tasing him without provocation.
If he was white you know damn well that cop would have made at least some effort to talk to guy and calm him down and work with the EMT's to get him some help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure if the guy was high, mentally ill, or had a medical emergency. I doubt talking to him further would get him in the ambulance. I’m not sure what else the cop is supposed to do. It may look scary to a regular person, but I don’t think tasing him was unreasonable. I’m surprised he was charged and would be interested to know what his superior thought he should do with an uncooperative patient.
So your uneducated opinion is why we need more training. I don’t expect you to understand because you are clearly not educated on how to respond to a medical emergency.
If this were an autistic man would you think it was a normal use of force.
If this were somebody with a diabetic reaction?
EMT have calls like this every hour. They don’t need a taser to get people in the midst of a medical emergency in an ambulance.
It’s pathetic you think it’s okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was no way that man was coherent enough to get in the car and go peacefully. It will be interesting to see what his background is
Drugs I bet
Duh...he was rambling about needing detox.
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that he was in the midst of some drug induced psychosis, but that doesn't warrant walking up and tasing him without provocation.
If he was white you know damn well that cop would have made at least some effort to talk to guy and calm him down and work with the EMT's to get him some help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was no way that man was coherent enough to get in the car and go peacefully. It will be interesting to see what his background is
Drugs I bet
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:If you look up FCPD’s use of force laws, the officer is justified in how he handled it. Obviously the chief is throwing him under the bus as a sacrificial lamb for PR. Ultimately the officer will be cleared based on their own orders.
Please cite the section of the rules you think justify this. Seriously, I want to understand. Because if you watch the video you see the unarmed man is actually turning AWAY from the officer just before being tasered, not approaching the officer; the officer does not give any verbal warning to the man prior to tasering him (not that I could hear on the video) and the officer deploys the taser a second time almost immediately after the first hit--no time in between to see how the man reacts.
How is that all permissible under use of force rules?
Oh, and the man had just responded "yeah" twice to being asked if he'd get in the ambulance, a split second before he was tasered without warning. The EMTs were opening the back doors of the ambulance as it happened. The guy wasn't walking to the ambulance yet and was starting one of the circles in which he'd been walking all along but he was not rushing and certainly wasn't rushing the cop who tasered him. That cop had just driven up and gotten out and appeared to taser the man with no obvious attempts to assess the situation. It's seconds between the cop's feet hitting the ground as he exits his cruiser and the sound of the first taser hit. The cop didn't even break stride--he just walks up and fires the taser.
Please give us the context of this relative to the use of force rules, PP.
Correct. And once the one bad cop escalates the situation, then the other reasonable cops feel forced to join in. So one bad apples spoils the bunch.
On a side note, I did find it interesting that the guy starts yelling, “I can’t breath” after being tazed and cuffed. So despite being wacked out on something he remembers what he’s been hearing on tv lately.
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:If you look up FCPD’s use of force laws, the officer is justified in how he handled it. Obviously the chief is throwing him under the bus as a sacrificial lamb for PR. Ultimately the officer will be cleared based on their own orders.
Please cite the section of the rules you think justify this. Seriously, I want to understand. Because if you watch the video you see the unarmed man is actually turning AWAY from the officer just before being tasered, not approaching the officer; the officer does not give any verbal warning to the man prior to tasering him (not that I could hear on the video) and the officer deploys the taser a second time almost immediately after the first hit--no time in between to see how the man reacts.
How is that all permissible under use of force rules?
Oh, and the man had just responded "yeah" twice to being asked if he'd get in the ambulance, a split second before he was tasered without warning. The EMTs were opening the back doors of the ambulance as it happened. The guy wasn't walking to the ambulance yet and was starting one of the circles in which he'd been walking all along but he was not rushing and certainly wasn't rushing the cop who tasered him. That cop had just driven up and gotten out and appeared to taser the man with no obvious attempts to assess the situation. It's seconds between the cop's feet hitting the ground as he exits his cruiser and the sound of the first taser hit. The cop didn't even break stride--he just walks up and fires the taser.
Please give us the context of this relative to the use of force rules, PP.
.Anonymous wrote:If you look up FCPD’s use of force laws, the officer is justified in how he handled it. Obviously the chief is throwing him under the bus as a sacrificial lamb for PR. Ultimately the officer will be cleared based on their own orders.
Anonymous wrote:There was no way that man was coherent enough to get in the car and go peacefully. It will be interesting to see what his background is