A clear case of a trigger happy policeman.
Posted by ObjectiveAnalyst 10 years, 7 months ago to The Gulch: General
Here is a case where the evidence is clear. The cop screwed up and the dash-cam video shows the overreaction. The reason for the stop was "seat belt violation." I'm sorry, but not wearing a seat belt, in and of itself, should not be reason to stop or question anyone of the age of consent. They pose no public danger and the only risk is to themselves. Who do we belong to?
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
The black dude innocently goofed up though. I think he was surprised and moved too quickly to retrieve a wallet from a car seat.
Should you ever get pulled over by a cop, do not trust him to act rationally.
Do not do anything suddenly, especially with your hands. Let them be seen.
I've been trained in shoot and don't shoot situations and I recall some really tricky scenarios. I got tricked into make-believe shooting a goofy-looking dude who shook his head every time he was told to stop. Then he whipped out a sign from behind his back that said "I'm deaf." ! said "Bang" at the same time. That was embarrassing. Taught me a lesson, though.
Want a chance of getting a warning instead of a ticket? To at least avoid being" tazed"? Do not mouth off. Do not lose your temper. Say "sir" or 'ma'am a lot. Me old dino used to have a lead foot and got out of several tickets just for being respectful.
We have a cop in our neighborhood, fired from his bigger city job after attacking a woman stopped for a seat belt violation. He did not shoot her, but did rough her up. The dashcam on that one showed a cop in need of anger management skills. He moved to our neighbor hood, but would not tell us his last name - we found out anyway. He has reacted violently to his neighbors as well. Meanwhile, the union got the dashcam video scrubbed from the Internet, and the news article about his dismissal, as well.
We need watchdogs.
Watchdogs that lie are no one's friend.
Simply not true.
Psychological tests are part of the training.
The first claim is true - but meaningless - we have many more police officers that we need than we have terrorists. More likely to die in a car wreck than a plane wreck due to number of rides in cars vs. planes. Doesn't automatically make planes safer (they are, I believe, however).
Are there crazy officers? Sure. Compared to the general public the number is tiny as they are actively assessed after every violent incident.
Fought it when the cigarette laws came out (rather than leaving it to the businesses that allowed it).
I don't smoke (did for six months when a teen), don't and never have ridden a motorcycle.
Decades later it's clear - more and more encroachment on our personal freedoms.
We were silent when it wasn't us.
Now it's us.
To add insult to that, in more than 80% of the cases they get off with no real punishment.
Perhaps we should stop being so worried about terrorists & be more worried about power mad killer cops.
This is what happens when you stop thinking & doing for yourself & have hirelings manage your cities & protection.
If cops are truly that afraid of citizens, they need to find another line of work. Preferably one that doesn't include weapons. I would rather that 100 cops get shot (After all they wear armor) than 100 unarmed citizens get shot.
Yes. This is so unfortunate. Having all these laws affects the way we interact with each other. It's really corrosive. IMHO there should be very few laws and they should be strictly enforced.
The good news is it says the officer will be prosecuted. It looks really bad b/c even if he thought the suspected seatbelt-violator had a gun, it appears he keeps firing after it's obvious he poses no threat.
Here is a positive story: http://www.indystar.com/story/news/2014/...
The true reason for the law...
Regards,
O.A.