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Originally posted by areyouserious2010
reply to post by TheWalkingFox
Maybe not, but the flash-bang used afterwards was clearly aimed at people trying to help him. So I'm inclined to think it may have been intentional, since there was at least one clear act of malice from the OPD.
Flashbangs can be used to disperse large crowds during riot like situations like this.
Flashbangs only deploy a loud bang and temporary blinding effect through the large flash associated with the small explosion. It is not like a regular fragmentation or incindiary grenade deployed by the military. Flashbang grenades are specifically designed to provide no fragmentation and a very little amount of heat and flame when they explode. For the flashbang to injure a person, it would have to literally be directly against their body. The Flashbang deployed in this situation had very little chance of hurting anyone. It was done to disperse the crowd.
You have to look at it from another angle. Technically, the police are required to protect the injured man and get him PROPER medical attention. If they do not, the department, as well as individual officers, open themselves to liability for failing to act.
Now, were the police not acting fast enough the get the man to medical attention? Well, maybe. In a fluid situation like this, it is hard to weigh the injured man's safety with the safety of the officers. But, the man also needs medical attention no matter how he received the injuries.
So, the police cannot rightfully allow the injured man to be surrounded and dragged off by the crowd. Not because their intentions are malevolent, but because if the police allow the man to be carried away and he fails to get the PROPER medical attention and dies, the department will be solely blamed for allowing this action to happen.
Hopefully, this sheds some light on why the police were attempting to break up the crowd that gathered around the injured man.
Originally posted by links234
How many rocks and bottles do you see here?
Originally posted by areyouserious2010
reply to post by TheWalkingFox
Maybe not, but the flash-bang used afterwards was clearly aimed at people trying to help him. So I'm inclined to think it may have been intentional, since there was at least one clear act of malice from the OPD.
Flashbangs can be used to disperse large crowds during riot like situations like this.
Flashbangs only deploy a loud bang and temporary blinding effect through the large flash associated with the small explosion. It is not like a regular fragmentation or incindiary grenade deployed by the military. Flashbang grenades are specifically designed to provide no fragmentation and a very little amount of heat and flame when they explode. For the flashbang to injure a person, it would have to literally be directly against their body. The Flashbang deployed in this situation had very little chance of hurting anyone. It was done to disperse the crowd.
You have to look at it from another angle. Technically, the police are required to protect the injured man and get him PROPER medical attention. If they do not, the department, as well as individual officers, open themselves to liability for failing to act.
Now, were the police not acting fast enough the get the man to medical attention? Well, maybe. In a fluid situation like this, it is hard to weigh the injured man's safety with the safety of the officers. But, the man also needs medical attention no matter how he received the injuries.
So, the police cannot rightfully allow the injured man to be surrounded and dragged off by the crowd. Not because their intentions are malevolent, but because if the police allow the man to be carried away and he fails to get the PROPER medical attention and dies, the department will be solely blamed for allowing this action to happen.
Hopefully, this sheds some light on why the police were attempting to break up the crowd that gathered around the injured man.
Originally posted by LadyGreenEyes
reply to post by ModernAcademia
Of course, they are mostly phony anyway. They claim to be poor, disadvantaged types, but I have seen MANY on video admitting to having a big trust fund or a nice stock portfolio. Many more are union thugs. In my opinion, the whole thing is a move to declare martial law, and stop the next election.
Originally posted by Cryptonomicon
reply to post by projectvxn
You're right. They should just stay peaceful. That will change the minds of the corrupt bankers, politicians, and police. Peace is what will force these oligarchs and aristocrats to change their ways.
Originally posted by projectvxn
reply to post by NoHierarchy
I got sick of being angry all the time.
You should try it some time.
im guessing you didn't correctly read what he said " the flash-bang used afterwards was clearly aimed at people trying to help him". i hope you know what the word riot means.
dictionary.reference.com...
"violent or wild disorder".
please tell me at what moment HELPING an injured man is considered VIOLENT OR WILD DISORDER. at that moment none of the protesters attentions was focused on violence or directly at the officers. i agree that some guys MIGHT (which i haven't seen in any video) have sparked it, just not at that moment, it was unnecessary.
here it is slow motion for you.
There's no fragments? When I look at the video, the guy is (accounting for perspective) about six to nine(?) feet away from it. There's other footage of him walking away from the thing when it hits the ground.
As soon as the flash goes off, bang, he's down. I had thought a fragment had got him.
What else could it be then?
The overhead shot is confusing. I can track via the smoke where things are falling, but that one seems to just hit and bang with no smoke trail.
I'd like to hear from people with some experience on this.