Foamy wrote:
Corolinth:
A quick search of gun safety rules and you will find something to the effect of "Do not point your gun at anything you do not wish to destroy". Said another way, "Keep the muzzle pointed in a safe direction.
So no, the victim did NOT behave in a perfectly appropriate manner for a gun owner.
(I am not absolving the county for their wrongdoing in this matter, in case you think I am trying to not blame the police here)
Police searching for a violent criminal (suspected murderer, I believe) by knocking at the (supposed) door of his location are met with the subject pointing a shotgun at them. How would you expect them to respond. A gun pointed at them from the house of a suspected murderer demands exactly the response they did. Their response was fine, though due to a mistake in the address (or whatever it was) they got the wrong guy and he responded in a way of a completely irresponsible gun owner and it cost him his life.
What it seems you are saying here is that the police, when presented with an attempted murder suspect who is pointing a weapon at them, should stop and have a conversation with him? What do you think they are expecting at that moment? To be invited in for coffee? Their response based on the situation they thought they were in was justified. The circumstances that led them to be in that situation are what caused the problem.
Wrong on both sides here.
The only hiccup I see in this take on the incident is that, as stated earlier, we are only getting one side of the story, theirs. Of course he was pointing the gun at them...
Quote:
Police searching for a violent criminal (suspected murderer, I believe) by knocking at the (supposed) door of his location are met with the subject pointing a shotgun at them.
Ever tried to open a door while "pointing" a shotgun?
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko