Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Taskiss wrote:
Rynar wrote:
I then suppose that when selecting our police officers we should be careful to grade them on what they feel to be "threatening".
"We" shouldn't be doing any such thing. "We" should elect officials to head police operations (or elect executives that perform these duties for us) and "They" should ensure proper training is provided and guidelines are observed.
The same people who are offering hush money to keep it quiet and instructing the owner to not disclose her video or story? Or did you just not watch 1:40-1:57?
That characterization has a ton of bias, Kaffis. Attempting to settle out of court is, unfortunately, a pragmatic approach to many legal situations and doesn't reflect guilt or innocence.
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I could agree with you if they were acting in a responsible manner that acknowledged the officer was in the wrong. But they made themselves complicit, instead, so this does exactly the opposite of making me content to trust them to discipline their officers, hold them accountable, and foster an attitude amongst the force that is deserving of my trust.
Your bias is the only determining factor that the officer was in the wrong.
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Taskiss wrote:
There could have been other options, I wasn't there and I didn't experience the threat. Had I been, and had I decided that shooting was the best option in order to take charge of the situation, I'd expect careful review from my supervisors. If I failed to gain their support for my acts, I'd expect to suffer appropriate consequences. I think that's appropriate for the cop in question.
And again. The distrust of the police forces around the country are due to this process breaking down in favor of police protecting their own. The stereotype is indicative of an endemic that can't be ignored, and won't be solved by trusting the same people who have broken the trust to fix it.
I've looked up polls on the trust and confidence of the police in the US and what I've seen is contrary to what you're asserting.... the "copsareoutofcontrol" YouTube channel hardly reflects the average opinion of the public on this.
Khross wrote:
A police officer should only resort to force if there are no other avenues of action. They are public servants. Any police officer who discharges their weapon, wounds, or kills a citizen in the performance of their duty, should be suspended without pay until a full investigation by an impartial body is performed.
Other than the "without pay" part, I wouldn't disagree with this.