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PostPosted: Thu Dec 04, 2014 9:46 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
I'd also like to point out that the NYPD manual information that I could find bans the use of choke holds that restrict breathing.

No one with any training goes for an air choke.

They banned it because no one used it? That clears things up.

TheRiov wrote:
d) During an air choke, you cannot breathe. That means you can't verbally call for help or surrender.


Sure you can.
This expert says you can @3:29


TheRiov wrote:
As DE said, this man died of positional asphyxiation, not a choke hold.

As the ME said and as the expert who examined the ME's report says, (@2;50 & 6:10)
He died from asphyxiation due to neck compression, chest compression and mouth nose (facial) compression. That isn't simply "positional asphyxiation". Further, even if it was positional asphyxiation, that in no way precludes negligence.

This is not a blood choke:
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 04, 2014 9:53 pm 
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Müs wrote:

Dude. That's absolutely unacceptable. To open fire in that situation? Jesus ****. That cop should be in jail.


He is. Well, he may be out on bail.


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PostPosted: Thu Dec 04, 2014 11:07 pm 
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Kaffis,
Sorry but how is that being fair at all to the dude that got shot? There's no indication that he has a CCW license. At least not that I could hear.


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 12:25 am 
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Lenas wrote:
Kaffis,
Sorry but how is that being fair at all to the dude that got shot? There's no indication that he has a CCW license. At least not that I could hear.

Read the last line of my post again.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 1:02 am 
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I guess I just don't see the point in talking about CCW training when he wasn't. Were you trying to explain why the officer shot so quickly?


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 7:33 am 
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Lenas:

Kaffis is pointing out that the police in pretty much every police department in every state assume that African Americans are carrying a concealed weapon by default. He's pointing out that there is something seriously wrong with how the police approach African Americans. And if you need actual proof of that sentiment, re-read Diamondeye's posts; they're crawling with latent racism.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 8:54 am 
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Air choke is different than a blood choke. It did look like a blood choke with placement of the other arm.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 9:49 am 
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Yes, an air choke is different than a blood choke, hence the discussion.

That looks like a classic arm bar air choke. His forearm is across the front of the neck from behind. His free hand is grabbing the wrist/hand and pulling back. He's driving his forearm into the front of the neck compressing the trachea.
In a rear naked choke (a blood choke), which that is most similar to, his elbow would be in front of the trachea rather than over the very carotid artery a blood choke is supposed to cut off with the forearm. Having your elbow over the artery allows space between the crook of the elbow and the artery, this does not allow compression and stoppage of blood flow.

So in summary, not a blood choke, as the left carotid is not properly compressed by the bicep, and the right is completely ignored by the forearm (which is busy compressing the trachea). It is an air choke as the forearm is being driven up under the chin, into the trachea.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 10:02 am 
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In that image it is but that is after they fell. If he originally went for a blood choke and it moved during the struggle - which I believe is what the video shows that's a completely different situation than if he initiated an air choke deliberately.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 10:19 am 
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Kairtane wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
In fact, when hand tools are used in areas where there's a risk that a spark could cause an explosion or fire, copper - which is what bullets are coated with - are frequently used.


In fact, copper is never used for hand tools, it is too soft. Brass is what is used in environnments where sparking would be a danger.


Yes, that's correct; I posted carelessly. Copper is used in the alloys to make some of these tools.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 10:26 am 
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Elmo, it appears he originally went for a take down with restraint, he didn't appear to go for any kind of choke initially. His initial intent appeared to be to take him down while restraining his arm.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 10:55 am 
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Lenas wrote:
Cop asks black guy to show him his license, guy checks his pocket, doesn't have it, turns to his car to get it, cop immediately pulls out his gun and opens fire. The reason I said gas station was because it's a public area, high foot traffic and you know, risk of explosion. The cop discharged his weapon with innocent bystanders and their vehicles directly in his line of fire for no reason other than a black guy looked in his truck.


Only difference: this state trooper was fired and is facing criminal charges.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 11:59 am 
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Vindicarre wrote:
The mere fact of advocating that the policemen's negligence should be mitigated because of the man's health begs the question. Police officers can and should be judged on their actions just like every other citizen. No citizen's negligence is mitigated by a victim's affliction. Police officers do not get legal protection from charges of negligence by law. They do, however, get protection from prosecution by those in the legal system.


No one has said that they should. The negligence in question, however, did not happen in executing the takedown maneuver, which was the matter presented to the grand jury. The officers were legally empowered to take Mr. Garner into custody; if he dies because of a medical condition he had that was aggravated as the result of actions needed to take him into custody he does not then get to claim that the officers were negligent in taking him into custody due to their actions that were necessary due to his own resistance.

Mr. Garner was a competent adult and knew perfectly well that the police could use force to take him into custody. He voluntarily assumed risk when he decided to resist arrest.:

Negligence

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Assumption of Risk Under the assumption of risk defense, a defendant can avoid liability for his negligence by establishing that the plaintiff voluntarily consented to encounter a known danger created by the defendant's negligence. Assumption of risk may be express or implied. Under express assumption of risk, persons agree in advance that one person consents to assume the risk of the other's negligence. For example, a skier who purchases a lift ticket at a ski resort usually expressly agrees to assume the risk of any injury that might occur while skiing. Thus, even if the ski resort negligently fails to mark a hazard on a trail resulting in an injury to a skier, the ski resort may invoke the assumption of risk defense in the skier's subsequent lawsuit
.

Mr. Garner knew very well that there was a danger that the police would use force to apprehend him if he resisted arrest.

New York has a Negligent Homicide statute creating criminal liability when someone causes death due to CRIMINAL (not civil) negligence, so let's look at:

Definitions of culpable mental states in New York

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4. "Criminal negligence." A person acts with criminal negligence with respect to a result or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offense when he fails to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk that such result will occur or that such circumstance exists. The risk must be of such nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.


The takedown by the officer did not meet this. He did not deviate from any standard of care a reasonable person would exercise in trying to apprehend a person who was resisting. He did not have the ability to perceive any "substantial or unjustifiable risk" resulting from that action. Garner's cries that he "couldn't breathe" don't matter because people who cannot breathe cannot talk.

Where he and all the other officers should have perceived such risk is in leaving Garner laying on the ground without attention for several minutes. The officers should have known about the risks of positional asphyxiation from their academy training and should have taken precautions to prevent it - but this was not the matter presented to the Grand Jury, and it is not acceptable to railroad the officer on the takedown as a substitute for presenting this matter, either because it's more spectacular, or because we want to subjectively asses that he stood around in a slightly more casual manner than all the others.

If you are going to argue the force was excessive, that's another issue - but again it was not the issue before the Grand Jury. that issue would be the subject of either A) departmental discipline or B) a Federal Civil rights investigation which is only just in the process of being started.

Leaving him laying on the ground afterwards for several minutes was not necessary and had nothing to do with taking him into custody - but that was not the matter presented to the Grand Jury so far as anyone can tell.

Moreover, Police officers in general DO NOT get protection from prosecution by the legal system. This occurs in SOME CASES. You do not get to make generalizations based on anecdotes. You also do not get to be outraged that the Grand Jury did not railroad on officer on the "any charge will do, as long as the officer is charged!" idea.

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Please don't presume to know me. Boalt Hall gave me a pretty good understanding of the law.


As for "presuming to know you", this is a bullshit complaint to distract from the issue at hand. You're making elementary mistakes. I don't really care what your credentials are; I care whether you can apply principles properly. Negligence has a lot more to it than the single idea you are cherry-picking. Then again, CNN has an endless parade of lawyers, some former prosecutors, who have found it convenient to forget how the Grand Jury process works because it didn't give the result they wanted, so perhaps you can look into getting a job as a legal analyst there. I hear going on TV and creating a moral panic is a great way to make a living.

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When one is unable to discern the implications of Double Jeopardy, at a glance, as it pertains to a Grand Jury, belies any claim one might make about their expansive legal knowledge.


Not really, and I did go back and check the information I had remembered and acknowledged that Double Jeopardy. Albert Einstein once acknowledged in an interview that he didn't offhand remember the speed of light, and when the reporter expressed surprise, Einstein told him "I know where I can look it up."

While I am by no means the Einstein of the legal world, I do know where to look things up, and I know how to apply those principles. People do occasionally make minor mistakes, you know. I try to make as few of them as possible, but if you're going to try the "I caught you in a minor error, therefore YOU OBVIOUSLY KNOW NOTHING!" then you're pretty much not worth the effort of talking to. Not remembering a fact "at a glance" does not in fact belie knowledge of anything.

You've been caught in major errors, most notably in this thread your whining that civilians in the Garner situation would have been charged. That's because civilians would have had no business arresting Garner at all. The fact that you would even make such an analogy speaks to a pretty poor grasp of our legal system. Don't tell me about your education either.

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The video that you're just now seeing has been out for months, and is the basis of many people's arguments (including mine).


Whether it's been available or not, it sure as hell has not been the basis of very many people's arguments, and if it's the basis of yours, you are not making that clear. I think it's more like now that I've addressed the later video, you don't like the fact that I'm undercutting you by pointing out that "yes, leaving him laying on the sidewalk is completely unacceptable"

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The one who did the take down was present and did nothing (even less than the poking and prodding done by the other officers) for the whole time Garner was unconscious. There's no way any of us can say the one who did the take down shouldn't have been in front of the Grand Jury, but it's plainly obvious that he's not the only one who should have been brought up for indictment.


Which I already said. We certainly can, however, say that the officer who did the takedown should not have been in front of the GJ for doing the takedown. He was standing around afterwards and not doing much of anything for Garner like everyone else, so if there was to be a Grand Jury proceeding it should have been for that, not against him just for the takedown. The takedown was not negligent at all - unless you're going to suggest that unseen medical issues are somehow a license for people to resist arrest based on the fact that techniques used to make the arrest might aggravate them.

This is not how our legal system works. If someone suffers injury due to someone else's actions we proceed against them for the actions that were actually negligent or criminal. We do not just throw any old charge at them because it's generally related to the matter and the end result of a conviction or judgment will be the same.

I don't know why you're even arguing with me. My issue here is with the assertion that the takedown itself was negligent. It wasn't. The Grand Jury made the correct decision based on the matter that was presented to them. People should not be indicted or tried just because the community is outraged and thinks any old charge will do. If you're going to assert that the officer that did the takedown stood around in an even-less-interested-manner than his partners, that this was the matter that was presented to the Grand Jury and that they should have indicted this guy for that, then you've got an awfully steep hill to climb. It's pretty **** obvious that he was taken to the Grand Jury based on the takedown itself which is entirely a matter of what seems spectacular and shocking to the public.

Your argument here basically amounts to you desperately trying to make it appear that I'm somehow not acknowledging that the police did anything wrong. They did, and the prosecutor made it worse. I wish I could be amazed that you are arguing with me that I am not pointing out police misconduct in the way you want it to be pointed out, but I'm not. I'm apparently the only one that can be assed to look up any statutes, definitions, or statistics or anything other than posting a quick video link and hurf durfing about it, so your whining that a cop wasn't indicted when he wasn't taken to the Grand Jury on the correct charge in the first place - which I have demonstrated- doesn't get much traction.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 12:00 pm 
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Vindicarre wrote:
Elmo, it appears he originally went for a take down with restraint, he didn't appear to go for any kind of choke initially. His initial intent appeared to be to take him down while restraining his arm.


I made my previous post before seeing this, so I appreciate your acknowledgement of this fact. Thank you for being reasonable about this.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 12:05 pm 
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Vindicarre wrote:
Yes, an air choke is different than a blood choke, hence the discussion.

That looks like a classic arm bar air choke. His forearm is across the front of the neck from behind. His free hand is grabbing the wrist/hand and pulling back. He's driving his forearm into the front of the neck compressing the trachea.
In a rear naked choke (a blood choke), which that is most similar to, his elbow would be in front of the trachea rather than over the very carotid artery a blood choke is supposed to cut off with the forearm. Having your elbow over the artery allows space between the crook of the elbow and the artery, this does not allow compression and stoppage of blood flow.

So in summary, not a blood choke, as the left carotid is not properly compressed by the bicep, and the right is completely ignored by the forearm (which is busy compressing the trachea). It is an air choke as the forearm is being driven up under the chin, into the trachea.


While this is all correct, note that as initially applied when Garner is still standing the hold wasn't being applied in this fashion - the officer's technique was applied primarily to restrain Garner's right arm to prevent him from possibly swinging at the officer in front of him, most people being right-handed. Trying to apply techniques to people in real situations rarely works out as well as it does in the practice room, and the struggling around with Garner and falling to the groundis probably what caused the change to what you see once he's on the ground.

Also, choke holds are not illegal. They are prohibited by NYPD policy.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 12:19 pm 
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I have made no statements regarding the legality of the take down. I have stated what I believe the officer's intent was during the take down. The take down did not kill him, the subsequent compression of his throat, chest and facial area caused the cardiac arrest and asphyxiation that did.
As I have previously stated, I have no idea what the charges placed before the Grand Jury were. Since you obviously have that knowledge, based on repeated statements of what was presented to the Grand Jury, it is pointless for me to attempt to continue.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 12:26 pm 
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Vindicarre wrote:
I have made no statements regarding the legality of the take down. I have stated what I believe the officer's intent was during the take down. The take down did not kill him, the subsequent compression of his throat, chest and facial area caused the cardiac arrest and asphyxiation that did.
As I have previously stated, I have no idea what the charges placed before the Grand Jury were. Since you obviously have that knowledge, based on repeated statements of what was presented to the Grand Jury, it is pointless for me to attempt to continue.


Good. Then don't. If you found yourself unable to draw any conclusions about what was placed before the Grand Jury based on the fact that the officer that performed the takedown was the only one charged, then I really can't help you.

If the Grand Jury was presented with the case that the officer was criminally negligent based on the factors you noted above that lead to death, then your issue should be with the prosecutor for trying to railroad one guy and letting his partners throw him under the bus for immunity deals, or else with the Grand Jury itself. If the latter, then maybe you should just accept that your fellow citizens have a very different view of the situation than you do, given that only 12 votes were needed for indictment.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 2:17 pm 
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I have a simple question: If I were attempting to take this garner dude down, and the situation had transpired as it did with these officers: would I be on criminal charges for the death?

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 2:37 pm 
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darksiege wrote:
I have a simple question: If I were attempting to take this garner dude down, and the situation had transpired as it did with these officers: would I be on criminal charges for the death?


In this hypothetical, are you a police officer? Are you alone, or do you have the other officers with you? If you are not a police officer, why on earth are you doing this? What actions did you take after the takedown? You are trying to reduce a complex issue to a simple question and it can't be.

I'm not sure why you're still focusing on the takedown, either. The takedown by itself is a minor contributing factor.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 3:06 pm 
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it is simple... I said it right in the question:
and the situation had transpired as it did with these officers.

If I saw a person doing something potentially wrong, and it resulted in me grabbing the dude and taking him to the ground, and the rest of the events occurred as transpired. Would I be on criminal charges for the dude's death?

This is a simple question: badge or no badge, you end a life you should be held to the exact same standard. If it is manslaugter, then prosecute the cop for manslaughter.

Some dude carrying a badge does not have a license to be kill. Which is exactly what these reports of police brutality show. The cops (not even just this Garner death and Fergison) who keep having brutality accusations with witnesses, etc. Are getting out of control. They are drunk on their own power.

North Las Vegas and the LVMPD police are almost unanimously a bunch of douchebags. There are one or two good cops I have met, but they have even harassed workers from other police HQs before for no reason.

I am respectful to the officers because generally it works out better. You do not end up with a night stick down your throat and a pair of handcuffs up your *** that way. But even talking with the LVMPD & NLVPD in a non official capacity shows what a bunch of power hungry fear mongering jerks these guys are. I personally do not see how more violence against them does not occur.

And when combined with all of the other reports that are surfacing of police going too far... these people need to be held accountable for their actions.

Like a wrong address no knock raid where they kill a little girl... at the wrong house.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 3:08 pm 
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Serienya wrote:
Lenas wrote:
Cop asks black guy to show him his license, guy checks his pocket, doesn't have it, turns to his car to get it, cop immediately pulls out his gun and opens fire. The reason I said gas station was because it's a public area, high foot traffic and you know, risk of explosion. The cop discharged his weapon with innocent bystanders and their vehicles directly in his line of fire for no reason other than a black guy looked in his truck.


Only difference: this state trooper was fired and is facing criminal charges.


Good. Although its only aggravated assault. Should be attempted murder.

But eh. Its a start.

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Cops should be held to a higher standard. They have the training, they have the skills to perform their job.

Murdering citizens is not their job. Protecting them is.

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Diamondeye wrote:
I'm not sure why you're still focusing on the takedown, either. The takedown by itself is a minor contributing factor.

You know, I think this is one of the fundamental blind-spots that you have with respect to these situations, DE. You look at each step along the way "by itself" instead of looking at the totality of the situation, and you thus miss the absurdity and injustice of the overall chain of events. Your thought process (not specific to this case; just in general) seems to be: (1) guy appears to be acting suspiciously, so cops approach and question = reasonable; (2) cops ascertain that he's committing some minor offense and decide to arrest him = reasonable; (3) guy does not immediately comply with instructions, so cops use alpha-dog style to "control the scene" = reasonable; (4) guy tries to walk away, so cops grab him = reasonable; (5) guy pulls away, so cops initiate force = reasonable; (6) guy resists or otherwise continues his non-compliance, so cops escalate the level of force = reasonable; etc., etc. And so you end up with the conclusion that it's perfectly reasonable for a guy who was jogging with his dog off leash to end up getting tasered or for some dude selling loose cigarettes to be wrestled to the ground in a choke hold. You never seem to step back and think, "Hm, this is a pretty appalling and disproportionate result given the minor initial offense, so maybe there's an issue with the overall process that led from point A to point B. Maybe there's a predictable escalation effect at work here, and we should seriously re-examine the legitimacy and appropriateness of the approach cops take to these kinds of situations."


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 3:57 pm 
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darksiege wrote:
it is simple... I said it right in the question:
and the situation had transpired as it did with these officers.

If I saw a person doing something potentially wrong, and it resulted in me grabbing the dude and taking him to the ground, and the rest of the events occurred as transpired. Would I be on criminal charges for the dude's death?


No Darksiege, it isn't simple. It depends on a lot of things. This guy was selling cigarettes on the sidewalk. You, as a private citizen, have no business dealing with that. If he was stabbing someone to death, that would be a different story altogether.

I've got a good idea, though. Why don't you go down to Las Vegas and find some serious crime in progress- a robbery, a murder, rape, whatever. Something serious, where no one could question the need to intervene. Then, when you **** it all up and end up in jail because you have no idea what the **** you're doing, you can explain to the judge how unfair it is that you aren't being treated the same as the cops.

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This is a simple question: badge or no badge, you end a life you should be held to the exact same standard. If it is manslaugter, then prosecute the cop for manslaughter.


This is a nothing statement. It has nothing to do with people being held to different standards - it has to do with different circumstances.

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Some dude carrying a badge does not have a license to be kill. Which is exactly what these reports of police brutality show. The cops (not even just this Garner death and Fergison) who keep having brutality accusations with witnesses, etc. Are getting out of control. They are drunk on their own power.


No Darksiege, they are not. This is emotional reaction to specific incidents on your part.

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North Las Vegas and the LVMPD police are almost unanimously a bunch of douchebags. There are one or two good cops I have met, but they have even harassed workers from other police HQs before for no reason.


According to who? You? Maybe that they just have to deal with people like you all day.

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I am respectful to the officers because generally it works out better. You do not end up with a night stick down your throat and a pair of handcuffs up your *** that way. But even talking with the LVMPD & NLVPD in a non official capacity shows what a bunch of power hungry fear mongering jerks these guys are. I personally do not see how more violence against them does not occur.


More likely it just shows you being hypersensitive.
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And when combined with all of the other reports that are surfacing of police going too far... these people need to be held accountable for their actions.

Like a wrong address no knock raid where they kill a little girl... at the wrong house.


Which is a completely different issue. I've discussed no-knock raids in the past, and they should not occur whether anyone is killed or not.

No-knock raids are completely different from riots which are completely different from the situation in NYC which is completely different from Ferguson.

As to the last one, if you actually still think Wilson did anything wrong, you're part of the problem.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 05, 2014 4:15 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
I'm not sure why you're still focusing on the takedown, either. The takedown by itself is a minor contributing factor.

You know, I think this is one of the fundamental blind-spots that you have with respect to these situations, DE. You look at each step along the way "by itself" instead of looking at the totality of the situation, and you thus miss the absurdity and injustice of the overall chain of events. Your thought process (not specific to this case; just in general) seems to be: (1) guy appears to be acting suspiciously, so cops approach and question = reasonable; (2) cops ascertain that he's committing some minor offense and decide to arrest him = reasonable; (3) guy does not immediately comply with instructions, so cops use alpha-dog style to "control the scene" = reasonable; (4) guy tries to walk away, so cops grab him = reasonable; (5) guy pulls away, so cops initiate force = reasonable; (6) guy resists or otherwise continues his non-compliance, so cops escalate the level of force = reasonable; etc., etc. And so you end up with the conclusion that it's perfectly reasonable for a guy who was jogging with his dog off leash to end up getting tasered or for some dude selling loose cigarettes to be wrestled to the ground in a choke hold. You never seem to step back and think, "Hm, this is a pretty appalling and disproportionate result given the minor initial offense, so maybe there's an issue with the overall process that led from point A to point B. Maybe there's a predictable escalation effect at work here, and we should seriously re-examine the legitimacy and appropriateness of the approach cops take to these kinds of situations."
[/quote]

No, I don't stop to think that because you are not describing any injustice. The citizen is causing their own problems. It comes from a fundamental mentality in this country - "What I am doing is not a big deal so therefore the police should not enforce the law that applies to it. If they do I get to physically resist, then pretend that their subsequent actions were due to my initial minor offense rather than my subsequent resistance to their attempts to enforce the law."

Moreover, we get situations like Ferguson where the officer didn't even attempt to issue a ticket, much less make an arrest, and gets attacked before he can even get out of his vehicle by someone that was trying to take his gun and presumably kill him with it. Michael Brown did not "get shot for walking in the streets" or "lose his life for stealing cigarettes", he got killed because he brutally assaulted a police officer for no reason whatsoever. You wouldn't see so much injustice if you didn't mentally manipulate situations to relieve the citizen of responsibility for their own actions.

If you don't want people to get bothered by the police for minor things like selling untaxed cigarettes then don't **** make laws against them in the first place. This isn't hard to figure out. Then you can deal with someone's dog when it comes running at you when it's not on a leash.

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