specsaregood
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I know, I know. I'm trying to get out as fast as I can.Meh...NJ.
The love of cops there is on a level that is almost clinical.
So then, idiots that fire their guns into the air during Fourth of July and on New Year’s should be ran over or shot without any warning by police or their neighbors?
Using a vehicle to mow somebody down is an improper use of force, period.
Surely, one of those units had something less-lethal with them.
The problemsI have with this incident is: (1) all of his crimes, so far that I am aware, were mostly property related, he never actually physically harmed others, aside from emotional harm, (2) his actions indicate he was likely unaware of his actions being either under the influence or suffering mental issues, (3) the police never provided him any forewarning or gave him an option to peacefully surrender, (4) the aggressing unit ignored the radio commands of the primary officer, and (5) the aggressing unit lacked concern for other’s private property, taxpayer’s public property, and the life of a man who was at that point merely walking away from the holding a supposed loaded firearm (i.e., at this point, were they even aware that this specific man was involved in the other possibly related crimes that day, including the robbery, arson, and shot or shots fired into the air?)
That's a stupid comparison. If someone commits a few strong-armed robberies, and armed robberies and threatens people with a weapon just before firing it off in the air, then yeah.
The guy is on a violent crime spree, appears to be unstable and is armed with a loaded 30-30.
“Everything in the video seems to point towards an obvious excessive use of force. It is miraculous that my client isn't dead,” Valencia’s attorney, Michelle Cohen-Metzger, told CNN. She said Valencia was clearly in crisis and suicidal. … “My client’s back was turned and the officer drove right into him,” she said. “It isn’t that dissimilar to a police officer shooting a fleeing suspect in the back.”
Are you going to be the one to walk up and taze him?
As it turns out, ramming this jackwad with a cruiser was less-than-lethal.
Seriously, some of the justifications given by people here for finding fault in this cop's actions sound as contrived and idiotic as the justifications some cops give for shooting unarmed people.
So you want to wait for the guy to actually shoot someone?
You don't care that he's stolen property, committed strong-arm robberies and is now walking towards a business with a loaded 30-30?
In the end the guy lived (with some rather minor injuries considering what he had done) and there was some minimal property damage. I don't like cops but I consider this a win.
Dan Bongino, a former Secret Service agent, told Cooper the suspect had to be stopped but not with a vehicle running into him.
“I have to question this tactic a bit,” he said. “I think setting up a secure perimeter and at least making some attempt to negotiate may have been far more efficient.”
No, it is a just comparison. Being suspected of violent crimes is not justification for the use of lethal force for that reason alone.
many people that fire off weapons during such celebrations have been convicted of prior crimes and felonies and/or were drunk or high at the time?
Is not the act of firing a weapon within city limits without justification not a crime in itself that endangers others and their property?
How many stray bullets fired off during such celebrations have injured or killed innocent bystanders?
As a matter of fact it turns out that he was suicidal, clearly this was very well his cry for help or an attempt at suicide-by-cop, for which law enforcement receives special training and does not at all involve the use of vehicles, but does instruct to be mindful of unnecessary use of force:
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http://www.nydailynews.com/news/cri...nman-ramming-police-cruiser-article-1.2185534
There are other non-lethal options available aside from a Taser (e.g., K9; OC canister; Taser X12 shotgun; pepperball gun; beanbag, rubber, or foam rounds; gas launcher; X26 Taser (which has up to a 20ft distance); etc.) As there are procedures for setting a perimeter, making contact, establishing negotiations, and escalating force. And most certainly, running people down with vehicles, choking them out, hanging them from nooses, and shooting them along with their hostage 300-600 times is not any part of those procedures.
Heck, he was not really even paying mind to the fact that he was being surrounded by police, indicating that several units could have probably walked alongside a moving SUV for cover while approaching him from the rear to charge and tackle him (also using less-lethal first if available), and securing the rifle, while 1-2 units parallel on foot holding a line-of-fire, shooting only if he attempts aiming his rifle.
The ends do not justify the means—not even when the resolution happens to turn out favorably. Ergo, two wrongs do not make a right.
Not at all, I want the use of lethal force to be an absolute last resort—which would be indicated right around the time that he begins raising the rifle at another individual while his finger is making contact with the trigger (including if it visibly discernible that the safety is off).
It is if there is a reasonable suspicion that the suspect will commit acts leading to grievous bodily injury or imminent death to another individual. Any reasonable person would probably conclude that this guy fell into that category.
First off, you are really reaching here. There are a string of connected incidents here.
You have to put it into context which is something you are going though mental gymnastics to not do. It's like saying the act of saying "I'm going to kick your ass" should always be taken the same way, regardless of if it's said in joking by your girlfriend or if it's some biker dude in a bar you don't know right after you bumped into him and spilled his beer. You're just being obtuse at this point.
Great, well if a suicidal guy with a loaded 30-30 came towards my business, I would probably down him before he got too close and therefore I can't fault anyone for using a strong level of force on the guy, especially when it turned out as well as this situation turned out.
If the guy was holed up in his house, then yes I agree. But in this case the guy was moving towards populated areas and someone had to stop him. I for one think the cop actually did the right thing.
Seriously dude? Sorry, but if you ever came on my property with a 30-30 acting like this guy did, I would just dump a couple of rounds in you and call it good. You might be willing to put yourself in harms way for a violent suicidal idiot, but I sure ain't and i can't fault anyone for not being willing to either.
The level of force applied was justified in my mind. There was one wrong and that was the idiot with the 30-30.
OK Rambo, you go then. As for me, I'm not risking myself for anyone like this jackwad and don't expect others to either. Given the fact that a gun can be pulled pretty quickly (finger on the trigger - really?) I wouldn't want to wait for whatever the last second is. You expectations are beyond realistic.
The Arizona police officer who used his cruiser to ram into an armed suspect has been accused of using excessive force in the past, resulting in a $20,000 settlement for a man who said the officer pointed a gun at him and choked him. ... Colon said Rapiejko pointed a gun at him, ordered him to get back in the car and threatened to shoot him. He later pulled Colon out of the car, handcuffed him and choked him, the complaint states.
Gee, could your justification be made any more ambiguous? So how many people did Valencia maim or kill that day? Was it zero?
Regardless, every indication in that video depicts a suicidal subject crying out for help. He did not fire at police or people, he offered no verbal queues, but supposedly fired a round into the air (And just as likely that was done unintentionally—I am curious as to why the initial confrontation was not included along with the rest of the video made public, e.g., did any of that actually happen or is a cover story to justify the use of force?), while indicating that he was considering offing himself. People who are truly suicidal commit to the act with little drama or hesitation; people who are truly homicidal do not parade around putting on a show, they commit to the act with lots of preplanning and little hesitation, usually until either they are forcibly stopped or ready to off themself.
Police are trained observers, they should have instantly recognized the underlying issues going on with Valencia that day and addressed them accordingly—and reacting a game of Frogger with him should never have played no part of that.
Police hold a higher duty to protect people, including people experiencing personal crises.
1. Events where only property was taken or damaged, nobody was seriously injured or killed in the process.
2. There is no indication that police were at the time aware that Valencia was involved in those earlier incidents, only the theft of a rifle and ammunition from Walmart.
3. You are in-effect justifying (as per your stated definitions and reasoning) that police may summarily kill a suspected murderer, robber, rapist, arsonist, or other such career criminal upon confrontation with them in the aftermath of their criminality even in cases where they are not directing grievous violence towards others.
Really, I do not think so. I feel that you’re trying to superimpose hindsight with the whole of fact involving Valencia’s actions throughout that day in order to justify the police’s matter-of-fact excessive force.
Again, he fired a shot into the air, not at the police or at others. We walked by several businesses, not into them, he stole a rifle and ammunition from Walmart and them walked out, he did not load the weapon and begin taking out employees and shoppers. Meanwhile, he pointed the rifle at his own head while walking away from tailing police vehicles.
Actions speak louder than words; it is simply a matter of interpreting them correctly.
You are taking the scenario out of context now. We are not speaking to private parties and private property, but police and their moral obligations to the public—which includes criminals, the deranged, and the sick.
You conveniently overlook that he had just left from one of the most populated places while armed and without committing a single act of serious aggression, i.e., leaving from Walmart, and had walked past many other populated businesses as well at the time.
You can clearly here the first cop on scene telling the other one to stand down.
"The actions taken by Officer Harris [who was immediately fired, criminally cleared of any wrongdoing, Brown's family accepted a settlement offer from the city] that night are not consistent with our department's training, directives, or acccepted practices..."