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Xcathdra
reply to post by blackthorne
Guys you cannot judge this after the fact. What people fail to take into account is you are getting all of the facts presented in one cohesive flow.
Totality of circumstances
Put yourself in the Deputies position..
You are driving down the road and spot a person carrying a weapon. The deputies had no idea if the weapon was fake or real until after the shooting occurred.
The standard is:
What threat did the officer perceive when deadly force was used.
While people are spending hours / days discussing this incident, the 2 deputies had to make a split second decision.
People can try to monday morning quarterback this all they want by arguing what the deputies should or should not have done. Anyone can say how they would have acted in that situation. Truth is you will have no idea how you would react until you are facing the same situation.
The simple fact is we were not present for the situation. We dont know what the weapons looked like. We dont know how the 13 year old was acting towards the deputies (including body movement).
Food for thought.
Wrabbit2000
reply to post by benrl
If I'm not mistaken, we grew up in the same general area of the state, in fact. I hailed from Orange County and a humble home just South of the 91/55 interchange in Orange to be specific. It was a different state and different nation overall then too.
For instance, I took a .22 rifle into Junior High School for a show and tell. They simply asked my father, in his role as a Police Officer, to remove the firing pin and make it 100% inoperative. That was sufficient back then. Now? I'm not sure you'd get a gun into a class there if a cop was actually carrying it for something other than a response call. I'll also say this case:
The Mother Is 'Still Struggling' . . . . . . Ex-Officer Who Shot Boy Still 'Depressed' : 5-Year-Old's Life, Death Linked With TV, Litigation (1985)
....was formative in how I grew to see Police, their actions and the consequences of them. Through a whole series of events later, my father and stepmother came to have contact with the Officer who shot that boy. It damn near destroyed the Officer, utterly. Much the same as I suspect the Officers in the case this thread is about, will have major issues for life. Tragedy....for all around. (For anyone interested, Anthony Sperl managed to go on and help a good many other Cops who faced similar personal crisis)
Wrabbit2000
reply to post by JayinAR
I understand your position and how deep, pure and raw your hatred for Police is, on what would appear to be all levels and all situations. It's impossible to mistake. I can also appreciate your position while strongly disagreeing with it. If I claimed to not have seen abuse that made me want to go punch a cop in the nose, I'd be a liar and a hypocrite. I absolutely have ..and some of it right here by ATS stories.
However, you've spoken of this as if we've watched a video where the kid did not, at any time, point his 'weapon' at police? Now my whole attitude will change on a dime if I see that in full evidence and they had options other than shooting.
The problem is, as I've been hunting for more? I've found nothing to describe what events came between their first shouts, as reported, to drop his rifle ..and when they opened fire. Do you have a source I've not seen? I'm very curious to see more if there is more to see here.
With some very major exceptions. For starters we dont use the term collateral damage.
JayinAR
No. Cops are TRAINED on how to react. Exactly the same as we were trained in the military.
JayinAR
I had to draw my weapon on a State Trooper of all people once while he had his hand on his pistol. Now if I had been one of these pigs I would have put two in his chest when he did not comply with my orders immediately. Thank god it didny come to that. But since he did not draw his weapon, he "got to go home that night." He was smarter than these idiots. And so was I.
JayinAR
Point is, you react the way you are TRAINED to react.
While I can see, somewhat, justification to point guns at the trooper, that situation is unique.
JayinAR
I had contact with the Statie in the weeks following 9-11 (can't remember exactly when it was, its all a blur now). Anyhow, we were on gate duty doing 12 hour shifts, 100% checks for bombs, terrorists, whatever and the gate was just off a main highway. The cop was tasked to direct traffic around the clog we were creating on the highway. The dude snapped and walked up to us shouting to hurry the hell up or else as he was reaching to unholster his pistol. He didn't get the chance to pull it. He had 4 M4s pointed at his chest with very clear orders to remove his hand from his holster.
The next day his superior matched him on post and made him issue an apology. The excuse was he was having domestic issues, but all I saw was a power hungry cop.
JayinAR
As for the rest, yes, complacency kills, but it is np excuse to just start sending bullets down range at the first sign of potential danger.
Xcathdra
Please tell me where personal accountability comes into play here. The kid is the one who went walking down the street and the kid is the one who refused to complay with commands.
Where is the personal accountability argument for the kid? The police are not responsible for other peoples actions.edit on 23-10-2013 by Xcathdra because: (no reason given)
OneManArmy
Firstly the "kid" is a minor. He isnt fully responsible for his actions until hes an adult, for the very reason that this case highlights, his actions can be erroneous and misguided, thats why he cant join the army, thats why he cannot buy alcohol and thats why he cannot have sexual relations. He isnt mature enough to make a sensible decision.
opethPA
OneManArmy
Firstly the "kid" is a minor. He isnt fully responsible for his actions until hes an adult, for the very reason that this case highlights, his actions can be erroneous and misguided, thats why he cant join the army, thats why he cannot buy alcohol and thats why he cannot have sexual relations. He isnt mature enough to make a sensible decision.
and if that was a real gun, is it any less dangerous because a kid has it in his hands?
OneManArmy
The fact of which could be established within seconds if any sort of dialogue was allowed to take place before bullets left guns. It was a case of a boy not doing what he was told to do, and defying the orders of a police officer who took offense at not getting his way so in the increasingly popular police tactic of shoot if someone dares disobey their authority, the boy became the latest victim of a scarily increasing police trend.
JayinAR
No, but they are responsible for their own.
Speaking of trigger happy... You do see the double standard you just made right?
JayinAR
In my story, if the cop had pointed his weapon at me, I would have shot him. Simple as that.
JayinAR
In this story, the cops fired APPARENTLY without any threat of bodily harm to themselves.
And? Contrarty to popular belief and officer is not required to start at the bottom and work their way up. Confronting a person who is holding what looked like a real gun allows law enforcement to jump steps. We do not have to start at any particular "level".
JayinAR
They skipped a couple of steps in the "use of force continuum".
JayinAR
You don't go around shooting people like freakin' John Wayne simply because they aren't listening to you. Jesus!
Reasonableness Standard[edit]The United States Supreme Court, in the case of Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, (1989), held that when engaged in situations where the use of force is necessary to effect an arrest, or to protect an officer's life or that of another, a law enforcement officer must act as other reasonable officers would have acted in a similar, tense, rapidly evolving situation.
This is one of those no win situations that occur in life and sadly a young child has lost his life.
I guess it comes down to how realistic that weapon looked....
...Cheye Calvo... was mayor of the small town of Berwyn Heights, Maryland.... next thing Calvo remembers is the sound of his mother-in-law screaming. He ran to the window and saw heavily armed men clad in black rushing his front door. Next came the explosion. He’d later learn that this was when the police blew open his front door. Then there was gunfire....
But the lies, obfuscations, and stonewalling were only beginning....
Calvo understood all of this almost immediately. Someone sent him a copy of “Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America,”...
As Calvo continued to advocate for reform, he started to hear from other victims of mistaken police raids, ...A series of police raid horror stories from Howard County, Maryland, also emerged....
Armed with these incidents, Calvo went to the Maryland legislature to push for reform. The bill he proposed was modest. It required every police agency in Maryland with a SWAT team to issue a quarterly report—later amended to twice yearly—on how many times the team was deployed, for what purpose, and whether any shots were fired during the raid. It was a simple transparency bill. It put no limits or restrictions on how often or under what circumstances SWAT teams could be used...
..Although I applaud lawmakers for passing this bill over the objections of law enforcement, I was disappointed that state law enforcement groups decided to oppose this measure rather than embrace it as an opportunity to restore the public trust....
By the following spring, the Maryland Governor’s Office of Crime Control and Prevention released the first batch of statistics. They were predictably unsettling. For the last half of 2009, SWAT teams were deployed 804 times in the state of Maryland, or about 4.5 times a day. In Prince George’s County alone, which has about 850,000 residents, a SWAT team was deployed about once a day. According to an analysis by the Baltimore Sun, 94 percent of the state’s SWAT deployments were to serve search or arrest warrants, leaving just 6 percent that were raids involving barricades, bank robberies, hostage takings, and other emergency situations.