Anonymous wrote:It's pretty amazing how many people seem to think it is ok for the police to break into someone's house in the middle of the night. It's no surprise that this ended in a gunfight. The surprise is how many people are ok with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She was a bag lady who paid bail for a guy selling crack and fentanyl that was ruining the lives of others. Associate with criminal trash and you get burned. Most people save their sympathy for innocent victims, not co-conspirators.
Are you a pro-life Christian perchance?
Compassion is not for the innocent and the righteous. That's not how it works. Humans are not 1 dimensional. Stop calling people trash.
Even still, there is NO evidence that this woman was a criminal or co-conspirator. She was sleeping in her home. She was shot and killed by agents of our government. Try just a little to look beyond your bigotry and show compassion for your fellow human and American. If you can't do that, you may actually be the trashy one.
No evidence?
It’s a matter of record that she made frequent trips to a drug house; that she paid bail for a drug dealer; that he was taped as having told friends that she was holding almost $15K for him; and that she rented a car in which a dead guy’s body was found before she returned the car to the rental agency; and they her last boyfriend fired shots at police officers because he assumed her violent drug-dealing ex (or co-) boyfriend was breaking in.
I’m sorry she made so many bad life choices, along with some better ones, but she put herself in harm’s way repeatedly. Saving my sympathy for someone who didn’t help criminals get away with selling crack and fentanyl. Fortunately the officials in Kentucky aren’t going to throw cops under a bus just to appease a mob.
You're a sad, sick individual. There's a special place in hell for all of you.
No he’s not. You’re the wacko crying over this degenerate.
You notice that PP doesn’t dispute the facts. They just can’t handle them because someone probably told them that if they screamed Taylor’s name enough times they could intimidate a prosecutor and a grand jury into an indictment. Fortunately, the Kentucky AG has scruples.
Again, no knock warrant late at night. And then the agents of Big Government kill someone for standing their ground.
Whatever happened to liberty and small government?
Sorry, but these cops and their enablers in the DA/AG office are the modern day equivalent of the Red Coats. They are an occupying force who come in from the countryside to collect their paychecks.
Again, they had reason to believe she was harboring the proceeds of crack and fentanyl sales.
Sorry, but she spent way too much time in the company of dealers and criminals not to fall under suspicion.
It seems she wanted a better life for herself but couldn’t quite disengage. Her father was serving life in prison for murdering a man for a crack debt so maybe she had a softer spot for hard-core criminals than she should have.
Wtf are you talking about?
Again, an ex boyfriend does not equate to a death sentence. Maybe Big Government should be able to kill you because you have a crappy ex or a criminally inclined relative?
Again, this is the epitome of state violence. This is what the communist Chinese do to their citizens.
Now you’re just babbling. No one with a brain thinks this was a deliberate hit job. And if this were like communist China she would have been under closer surveillance, arrested the first time she bailed out her drug dealer boyfriend, and monitored closely enough that the cops knew her current (or most recent) boyfriend was in her apartment with her that night.
She made bad decisions and put herself in harm’s way over and over again. The only people I feel sorry for are other Louisville residents who’ll now lose $12 million in much-needed city services.
Anonymous wrote:They knocked and identified themselves
Nobody came to the door,
They were legally allowed to enter
Her boyfriend had a gun
He shot the returned fire
These are all facts. Sad? yes, that a person who was turning her life around was with a person who was not a very good person.
Just because you don't like the outcome you have to accept it that based on the evidence her killing was not intentional.
Her family settled a wrongful death claim. They most likely knew this was coming and they settled less than a week ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that the police’s actions are perfectly legal is exactly why taxpayers who live in these cities are advocating for police and legal system reform.
This should be illegal. The cops who did this are negligent and should be heading to prison. But they are not because the law is not just and is in dire need of reform. Independent oversight and prosecution is desperately needed.
When people say “defund the police” it’s because they are whiplashing against the perversion of Justice in cases like Brianna Taylor and Philando Castile. A new system of police combined with mental health officers needs to be built from the ground up, along with massive legal reform.
Certain Americans are currently living under a militarized Big Government force that is, at its core, freedom-hating.
Police did not do anything wrong here. The politicians did. Get mad at the prosecutors and the judge who signed the warrant. Stop blaming guys who were shot at.
Anonymous wrote:Simple:
Floyd was murdered by the cop by placing his knee on his neck. He could have at any time stopped, but did not. That is murder.
Taylor was shot accidentally by the police. The police had a warrant. Boyfriend shot at the police and police returned fire after being shot at. Killed Taylor by accident. Traffic accident, but not intentional and caused by boyfriend shooting first.
Perhaps bad intel on the warrant, but when an officer delivers an arrest warrant, if you shoot at them, what are they supposed to do. Just leave?
Also a grand jury announced the charges. The charges were given to people in the community and that is what they came up with.
Anonymous wrote:The fact that the police’s actions are perfectly legal is exactly why taxpayers who live in these cities are advocating for police and legal system reform.
This should be illegal. The cops who did this are negligent and should be heading to prison. But they are not because the law is not just and is in dire need of reform. Independent oversight and prosecution is desperately needed.
When people say “defund the police” it’s because they are whiplashing against the perversion of Justice in cases like Brianna Taylor and Philando Castile. A new system of police combined with mental health officers needs to be built from the ground up, along with massive legal reform.
Certain Americans are currently living under a militarized Big Government force that is, at its core, freedom-hating.
Anonymous wrote:A Louisville police officer has been shot amid the protest.
https://www.wdrb.com/news/lmpd-officer-shot-at-brook-and-broadway-in-downtown-louisville/article_8236bf40-fdfd-11ea-8fd2-d3f4b95b0f33.html
Anonymous wrote:Simple:
Floyd was murdered by the cop by placing his knee on his neck. He could have at any time stopped, but did not. That is murder.
Taylor was shot accidentally by the police. The police had a warrant. Boyfriend shot at the police and police returned fire after being shot at. Killed Taylor by accident. Traffic accident, but not intentional and caused by boyfriend shooting first.
Perhaps bad intel on the warrant, but when an officer delivers an arrest warrant, if you shoot at them, what are they supposed to do. Just leave?
Also a grand jury announced the charges. The charges were given to people in the community and that is what they came up with.