Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
The man everyone is creating murals for robbed and held a gun to the stomach of a pregnant woman.
Wow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
The man everyone is creating murals for robbed and held a gun to the stomach of a pregnant woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
The man everyone is creating murals for robbed and held a gun to the stomach of a pregnant woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
The man everyone is creating murals for robbed and held a gun to the stomach of a pregnant woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
I can't. He doesn't need to be a saint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
NP- but it was a drugged up man with a heart condition. I completely think the cop is guilty but unfortunately the man that lead this huge movement was not a saint.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
Not sure if you are a troll, born yesterday or a dupe. Why don't you lie face down and have four 200+ men kneel on you for 8 minutes and see how well you breathe. George Floyd told them he couldn't breathe and bystanders heard and shared the same - but I guess you'd say they were just hard of hearing.Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it telling that another officer asks multiple times about moving Floyd to his side and every time Chauvin says no or brushes him off.
The accused cop’s reported response to his colleague’s suggestion to reposition in case of/to guard against “excited delirium” can be read to suggest that the accused believed that the position Floyd was in was the appropriate one. That, coupled with the assertion in the criminal complaint that officers are trained that certain restraint positions pose safety risks is going to make training and related records a big issue. If the officer in fact was trained to use the position in question as a precaution against a potentially fatal syndrome a “malignant heart” would seem hard to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
Another big question is going to be why the police kept Floyd on the ground for so long. What were they waiting for? A wagon? Floyd allegedly resisted handcuffing and later resisted being put in the police car, claiming he was claustrophobic. Part of this resistance reportedly was that he deliberately fell and lay on the ground. Photos appear to show him at least partially quartered off the ground in a position that should have allowed at least some chest expansion.
As bad as it looks, the knee itself appears at this point not to have been a contributing factor. Not monitoring Floyd more closely, particularly when he had become nonresponsive seems a much bigger issue.
I despise the way you attempt to state things as fact that are not. What a manipulative bunch of lies you have posted. You are police or work for them.
Anonymous wrote:Many months later after this all quiets down the legal funding will be: a very ill very intoxicated man former felon was in the act of committing another felony when police were called. He was combative with the police, a very large and intoxicated man. The police cuffed him, set him down and he had a heart attack and died. Police at the time thought he was passed out from drug use (very common among drug users) and did not realize he was having a fatal heart attack. Since the police are not medical professionals and did call medical professionals who did not get to the scene in time they are not liable for this unfortunate death.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it telling that another officer asks multiple times about moving Floyd to his side and every time Chauvin says no or brushes him off.
The accused cop’s reported response to his colleague’s suggestion to reposition in case of/to guard against “excited delirium” can be read to suggest that the accused believed that the position Floyd was in was the appropriate one. That, coupled with the assertion in the criminal complaint that officers are trained that certain restraint positions pose safety risks is going to make training and related records a big issue. If the officer in fact was trained to use the position in question as a precaution against a potentially fatal syndrome a “malignant heart” would seem hard to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
Another big question is going to be why the police kept Floyd on the ground for so long. What were they waiting for? A wagon? Floyd allegedly resisted handcuffing and later resisted being put in the police car, claiming he was claustrophobic. Part of this resistance reportedly was that he deliberately fell and lay on the ground. Photos appear to show him at least partially quartered off the ground in a position that should have allowed at least some chest expansion.
As bad as it looks, the knee itself appears at this point not to have been a contributing factor. Not monitoring Floyd more closely, particularly when he had become nonresponsive seems a much bigger issue.
Anonymous wrote:It’s Freddy Gray all over again.
