Texas Cop Uses Stun Gun on 76-Year Old Man for Expired Registration
Posted by Zenphamy 10 years, 4 months ago to Government
Oh my, another case of a poor misunderstood policeman just doing his job against the evil citizen.
And the beat (ing) goes on.
And the beat (ing) goes on.
On another note regarding video/audio recording of the police, why is it that cops are so dead set on not wearing body mics and cams as part of their uniforms?
Does anyone doubt that if Officer Darren Wilson's account of what happened in Ferguson, MO, the day he shot Michael Brown were caught on video/audio that town would not have burned? I don't know if Officer Wilson's account is true or not, but I would love to be able to judge for myself without having to simply take his word for it. If Michael Brown really did the stuff that Officer Wilson said he did and it was recorded on video, that town would not have gone up in flames.
How about the shooting of Robert Crawford III? That was the guy toting around a BB gun in a WalMart. Police claim that they told him to drop the weapon, but the store surveillance video suggests they came in hard and immediately gunned him down on sight. I understand their aggressive stance with him, but I am not sold on the need to pull the trigger the nanosecond they saw him. It did not appear to me that there was ever any attempt to communicate with him at all. If they did try and he reacted badly, then let the chips fall where they fall, but in my heart of hearts, I don't think they ever gave him a chance.
Same thing with Tamir Rice. I understand the hard approach they took, although I think there were better ways of handling that situation than driving up within 10 feet of a suspect in possession of a gun and screaming for 2 seconds before gunning him down. Doing it the way that they did was absolutely guaranteed to get somebody killed that day be it the cop(s) or the dumbass kid with the pellet gun. The better way top have handled that call would have been by pulling up 50 yards away with and AR-15 and a bullhorn from behind the cover of the squad car, as there was no imminent threat at that time.
I wish, in both cases (Crawford III and Tamir Rice) that the squad car and/or the officers had video/audio recording devices to help corroborate the officer's stories in those cases. In Rice's case, I'd also like to know what the cops were talking about and doing in the 4 minutes when they left him there bleeding to death. The video from a distance proves that they certainly were not making any attempt to administer first aid to the 12 year old kid they just shot in the gut.
The only reason this case with Mr. Vasquez gets any attention at all is that is recorded for all to see on the dashcam video. Without that, Officer Robinson writes up a bogus report with a few choice falsehoods, and WHAMMO, Mr. Vasquez is convicted of assaulting an officer of the law, resisting arrest, and whatever other BS they could think of all the while making Robinson the department hero for the day. Further, the statistics mentioned by Technocracy in an earlier post get padded a little more.
Recording devices would weed out the trash from our police force more surely and accurately than an army of internal affairs cops who also wear the badge. Additionally, it would be a helluva lot cheaper to buy that tech than to continually pay out the kinds of settlements that Mr. Vasquez is sure to get. If cops know that their Blue Wall of silence has effectively been dismantled, then the bad cops would be gone and the supposed good cops who never had the balls or brains to rat out the bad ones could be real good cops again.
You know that moral high ground you think that you have? Well, you just lost it. Hope you're proud of yourself. It takes a real concerted effort to say something that dumb.
I do have one question for you, though. You seem hell bent on blaming Mr. Vazquez for this beating by continually citing the fact that he stepped out of his car. My question is regarding exactly which part of the criminal code you think Mr. Vasquez violated by stepping out of his car? My contention is that while it may not necessarily be advisable, it is not against the law. Further, while he was out his car, he made no aggressive moves whatsoever toward Officer Robinson. You and Robbie have continually repeated that claim, but after viewing the video a dozen times or so, I never once saw anything remotely aggressive that Mr. Vasquez did. Perhaps you would like to cite the exact time within the video that proves that Mr. Vasquez needed to have his teeth kicked in because I would love to see this phantom aggressive move you keep talking about. Keep in mind that you saying it's true and it actually being true aren't necessarily the same thing. The actual facts matter more than the convenient ones that you have invented in your mind to be able to make this absurd argument of yours. Anybody with eyes, ears and a brain can see that you are wrong.
Also, I have to say that I haven't laughed so hard in the last few months as when I read this gem from you. "... you are going to face the stout opposition of self-defense." I swear that I can't tell whether you are a comedian, a talking head for one of the major political parties or just some starry eyed cop groupie/apologist when you say something that blatantly ridiculous. With that, you simply have no credibility here. You just can't say something that stupid and be taken seriously.
You may not win, but at least a judge won't beat you up for arguing with them.
Mr. Vasquez will be paid a lot of money by the city to settle his suit and that city's citizens will pay a lot more through their taxes to cover the settlement or increased insurance. The cop may get a slap on the wrist, but his buddies in the locker room will slap him on the back and tell him he did good. Then he'll continue on with his career there or find another job with another city. He might even move on to a Fed job where he can really screw with those evil 'Constitutionalists'.
I've also begun researching total video, audio, and GPS auto protection with automatic cloud storage. I even thought of a sticker for my rear window and driver's window with the comment, "Smile, you're on Youtube."
Yes, there are practicalities in all confrontations initiated by police and yes, they are licensed to exert force including your death but that has to stop. And only we can stop it.
Are you a man? Are you a free man? Do you have any self esteem left in you? Do you live in a jail?
I don't abide fools.
I do not and will not blindly obey.
I will not kneel. I will not bow.
I abhor bullies.
I maintain that I have the right to be left alone.
As to obey and let the court sort it out, that costs me money, time, and hassle--none of which I have an excess of to waste on some ignorant badge's wrong assumptions and actions.
"Fascinating. This act of unjustified police brutality brings out all the worst in some of the commenters here. Just look at the extreme violence and nastiness proposed, the very same mentality as the cop's.
.".. No wonder cops worry for their own safety, knowing such attitudes exist among the populace. No wonder they view everyone as a potential enemy. And with U.S. policy of preemptive strikes against any number of countries for no good reason at all, the 'shoot first, sort out later' practice becomes legitimized.
"We're witnessing here the end of civilization as we knew it and the onset of total tyranny. Hello, Orwell's 1984. ..."
It will take an enormous feat of volitional consciousness and conscious volition to reverse this accelerating disintegration. With the majority swept along into more and more hostility, can we find 100 monkeys of rationality?
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