Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Regardless, the 3 police officers in the video were placing him under arrest due to an outstanding warrant for a rather serious reason. And, he resisted and was actively fleeing.
This doesn’t seem racially motivated at all.
Rather serious? He failed to appear in court on a permit ... <$500 fine and the court never notified him so his warrant wasn’t his fault.
What’s your point? He knew he was arrested and resisted, creating a dangerous situation and an obvious need to use force. The only thing this officer seemed to do wrong was mistakenly use the wrong level of force.
No they don’t need to use any force for a <$500 fine and a warrant that was a court administrative mistake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Regardless, the 3 police officers in the video were placing him under arrest due to an outstanding warrant for a rather serious reason. And, he resisted and was actively fleeing.
This doesn’t seem racially motivated at all.
Rather serious? He failed to appear in court on a permit ... <$500 fine and the court never notified him so his warrant wasn’t his fault.
The armed robbery was his fault.
He slept at a girls house and left with no money... some armed robbery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Regardless, the 3 police officers in the video were placing him under arrest due to an outstanding warrant for a rather serious reason. And, he resisted and was actively fleeing.
This doesn’t seem racially motivated at all.
Rather serious? He failed to appear in court on a permit ... <$500 fine and the court never notified him so his warrant wasn’t his fault.
What’s your point? He knew he was arrested and resisted, creating a dangerous situation and an obvious need to use force. The only thing this officer seemed to do wrong was mistakenly use the wrong level of force.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Regardless, the 3 police officers in the video were placing him under arrest due to an outstanding warrant for a rather serious reason. And, he resisted and was actively fleeing.
This doesn’t seem racially motivated at all.
Rather serious? He failed to appear in court on a permit ... <$500 fine and the court never notified him so his warrant wasn’t his fault.
The armed robbery was his fault.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Regardless, the 3 police officers in the video were placing him under arrest due to an outstanding warrant for a rather serious reason. And, he resisted and was actively fleeing.
This doesn’t seem racially motivated at all.
Rather serious? He failed to appear in court on a permit ... <$500 fine and the court never notified him so his warrant wasn’t his fault.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just the fact she resigned immediately showed a lot more remorse than other police officers in similar situations, imo.
Nope. Trying to protect her pension/benefits.
You don’t know that to be true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Regardless, the 3 police officers in the video were placing him under arrest due to an outstanding warrant for a rather serious reason. And, he resisted and was actively fleeing.
This doesn’t seem racially motivated at all.
Rather serious? He failed to appear in court on a permit ... <$500 fine and the court never notified him so his warrant wasn’t his fault.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Regardless, the 3 police officers in the video were placing him under arrest due to an outstanding warrant for a rather serious reason. And, he resisted and was actively fleeing.
This doesn’t seem racially motivated at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how we expect a 20 year old to make all the correct moves while in an extremely stressful situation, but we can make excuses for a 26 year veteran of the police force who "made a mistake" in the same situation that she's probably been in a few dozen times, and has been trained to handle it.
Thank you for this point, which should be abundantly obvious to anyone capable of rational thought.
I should add that I very much hope she is convicted of manslaughter and serves every one of the ten years maximum term, but my quarter century in the system leaves me with the certainty that she is likely to not be convicted, and even if she is, to serve a piddling sentence just like Oscar Grant's killer did.
Will she also be sued by the victim’s family? Not only should she not benefit from her pension but it would be nice to keep her forever tied up in court, spending money on legal fees and not letting her “walk”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Aren’t you smart? Clearly there either wasn’t a plate reader in the squad car in this situation, or the car was his mother’s. They didn’t learn he had an outstanding warrant until they took his ID back to the squad car and ran it there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I’ve only read one article and watched the video.
Questions:
-Did she and the other officers know they were arresting someone with an outstanding bench warrant?
-Did she know what the warrant was for?
-Doesn’t the fact that he was not only resisting arrest but actively fleeing warrant use of force such as a taser?
-Assuming that drawing the gun instead of the taser was a terrible mistake rather than her intended choice of weapon, why is this incident being labeled as fueled by racism? What would a black officer have done in that situation where someone resists and attempts to flee an arrest for an outstanding warrant (not a warrant for unpaid tickets, but for something serious as was the case here)? Taser him, correct?
Automatic license plate readers are extremely common on Police cruisers across the USA.
They scan EVERY license plate the cruiser passes (yes - your car too. Every time).
Registrations linked to outstanding criminal warrants appear automatically on the laptop present in every cruiser (yes, they have those too. Have for years).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just the fact she resigned immediately showed a lot more remorse than other police officers in similar situations, imo.
Nope. Trying to protect her pension/benefits.
You don’t know that to be true.