Hannibal wrote:
I don't have to find a reason DE, the cop was wrong. We have proof the cop is wrong.
No one said otherwise. In fact, even the cop evidently thought he was wrong since he didn't arrest the guy. I said a reason it's
his fault. Whose responsibility is it to train police officers and to ensure that training imparted the necessary knowledge to them? If this officer was trained, tested, and the training did in fact address open carry at least in a cursory fashion, its his fault, and in that case he still did the right thing by not arresting the guy. If on the other hand, any one of those 3 things did not occur, it is the fault of the department.
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Now the question is why the cop was wrong. Did I mention the cop was wrong? I'm playing devils advocate here since there seems to be a bit of play in the media that this guy was just looking for a payday.
I don't see that you're playing devil's advocate at all, since your theory requires that the cop know perfectly well that he is wrong, go harrass the guy anyhow, then turn around and not actually do anything to him, while totally ignoring the later actions of the DA and the spokesperson.
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I guess the cop pointing his pistol at the guy wasn't escalating the situation past a verbal encounter? Seeing an obviously armed individual that you seem intent on making contact with "because you don't know who they are"- starting off the interaction in such a way to instantly shut down lines of communication with the individual is the wrong way to do it.
Not really, no. In fact, that is not necessarily the wrong way to do it, and it certainly does not shut off lines of communication. In fact, now that guy has a very powerful incentive to communicate with you because you already have your weapon out and pointed with surprise. It was a very effective way of keeping the interaction verbal - 40 minutes of verbal, which ended in no arrest.
I don't buy that the gun owner was looking for a payday, although he may have been looking to make a political statement, and is now trying to salvage that statement by complaining that he was approached at all, rather than being able to complain that he was arrested and his gun confiscated. Then again, maybe he is only complaining because of the actions of the DA after the fact.
The officer's actions are not consistent with someone looking for an altercation; they are consistent with someone who thinks they are doing the right thing, but who listens to what the supposed violator has to say and realizes that they maybe ought not to make an arrest.
What is also consistent with my interpretation is the action of the DA and the police spokesperson. They are consistent with the city trying to cover its *** for not educating the officer on open carry, and not being able to cover it by disciplining the officer becuase if they try the union will have them over a barrel for failure to train.