FarSky wrote:
A situation in which they've put themselves by doing their job...incorrectly. That's the key.
If you want to play the "But policing is dangerous and difficult!" card, then they have to be held to a higher standard than a window-washer who shows up at the wrong building. There's a lot about this situation we don't know, and will never know, and I don't want my following example to reflect directly on it, so bear with:
The police are looking for someone. They believe the house to be, say, #221. They go up and rap on the door. A man opens the door. Now, police have no way of knowing what's going on the house. If the man is concerned for his safety, and opens the door armed with a gun, is that illegal? Is that worthy of capital punishment?
We'll never know if the man simply answered the door with a gun (completely legal, I assume), or if he opened it and brandished it about at the policemen while screaming about killing cops or what. But if he simply opened the door with a gun in his hand, does that deserve death?
Anyone getting shot and killed in this situation is a tragedy; completely avoidable and unnecessary, it only happened because someone **** up. Had the police not been at the incorrect house, a man wouldn't lie dead over it. My point is: if anyone absolutely had to die over this mistake, why should it be the guy on the receiving end of the ****, and not the one(s) who caused it?
Answering the door with gun in hand = not illegal
Answering the door with gun in hand because you don't know who it is at your door = not illegal, but potentially dangerous.
Answering the door with gun in hand, brandishing it threateningly, possibly pointing it at the person knocking, without knowing who it is = not illegal, but extremely stupid.
Cops made the first mistake, yes. But beyond that, the victim's mistake escalated it into something it didn't have to be.
Had he made an attempt to communicate before whatever action he took with his weapon, the mistake may have been found out, thus causing no one's death. Perhaps he would have been detained wrongfully on suspicion of being the perp, but that is all.
No one had to die, and the confluence of the mistakes is what ultimately caused an unnecessary death.
_________________
This must be
Thursday. I could never get the hang of Thursdays.