CopThatSupportsRonPaul, you seem to be laboring under the delusion that this kid was some hardened criminal or fugitive, when even the cops were given no such indication. All they knew was that someone was walking on the overpass, and someone called them to ask them to check it out. In other words, the original caller most likely called precisely because they were concerned with this kid's safety.
While walking on the overpass is dangerous, it's hardly a capital crime, and it's hardly probable cause for a no-holds-barred arrest. While cops do need to always be on their guard for unexpected threats, there was no more reason to suspect that this kid was a violent criminal than there was to suspect any other random teenager in America.
Considering the kid was clearly injured after a 30-foot drop, the cops entering the scene had no legitimate reason to arrest him in the first place. Rather, their job was to call a paramedic...but instead, they decided to apprehend him - when up to this point, his only known crime was falling off an overpass and getting badly hurt.
Now, according to the cops, the kid was mumbling things like, "kill cops" while he was squirming in agony on the ground (personally, I'd be thinking the same thing if I just fell off an overpass and broke my back and the cops had the audacity to try and arrest me for it). In my mind, there are only four remotely plausible reasons for this:
- He was already a disturbed individual who mumbles things to himself.
- Falling and breaking his back put the kid into a delirious state of shock, so he started mumbling his inner thoughts - and he might have legitimately been very upset with these particular cops, for various reasons
- The cops lied about the order of events, and they actually did something first to the kid that would provoke hatred and death threats...like, for instance, if they apprehended him on top of the bridge, he mouthed off, they tazed him for it, and he fell off and broke his back.
- The cops lied about him saying anything of the sort at all.
In any case, death threats kind of lose their menace when they're vaguely mumbled by a sixteen-year-old kid who's squirming around on the ground after a 30-foot drop onto pavement. Even when a capable person makes a credible death threat to another person, they're supposed to be apprehended in as routine and nonviolent a manner as possible. When an apparently unarmed suspect is threatening to kill someone, responsible cops will back off and assess the situation for a moment before rushing in and getting gun-happy or tazer-happy.
By themselves, such threats are never an excuse for brutal force, even if the suspect is completely uninjured. Until a weapon enters the picture or the suspect is physically beating the shit out of the cops, tazers should never be used. They're a weapon of second-last resort when apprehending the most difficult and violent suspects, not a compliance weapon. (In other words, there's absolutely nothing wrong with cops or anyone else having tazers. There is something wrong with cops overusing them without justification and/or blatantly assaulting people with them.)
Now, remember that until the kid allegedly made threats, there was no reason to arrest him that was not entirely overshadowed by his injuries.
Upon hearing such threats, here's what a sensible and responsible cop would have thought:
"Well...I should keep an eye on him to make sure he doesn't pull a weapon out of his ass, but there's no reason I even need to be in striking range of him in the first place. I don't particularly need to arrest him for anything while he's in this state, though I might apprehend him over his threat once he's treated. He needs to learn that he can't just throw around threats like that. Anyway, how about I call a paramedic and talk with this kid until he calms down?"
Instead, the cops on the scene thought,
"Oh, shit! He's partially conscious and mumbling threats! Clear and present danger! We've gotta taze this little bastard until he's half dead, because there's no other safe way to arrest him for falling off the overpass!" Once you get to the point where this line of thinking is acceptable to you, you need to realize that you've either become jaded beyond rationality or that the power has gotten to your head. In either case, it's time to turn in your badge and gun, for the good of the community you serve.
Cops need to remember that they are not above the law (except when the law is unjust of course), and they do not have the right to go around arresting whoever they want for any reason by any means necessary.
Furthermore, the rest of us need to make them remember. There's a reason cops have a widespread reputation for being "bullies on the playground" who have exceeded their mandate to serve and protect. Their sense of authority often allows them to get away with things that nobody else can, mainly because the judicial system usually takes their word at face value...and they know it, resulting in the "Who do you think they're going to believe, me or you?" situations. The law itself is part of the problem of course, since "resisting arrest" is a crime in and of itself - this makes it not only extremely dangerous but also unfairly illegal to fight back against aggression by armed thugs with a badge, and it instantly gives false legitimacy to any violence cops engage in (resisting arrest must obviously add aggravation to any criminal charges, and it's a difficult balancing act, but I certainly do not like the idea that we are not allowed to defend ourselves from assault by a cop). The more we allow this to happen and the more unaccountable cops become, the more violent people the job will attract in the first place.
To be worthy of the badge, police need to ask themselves if the suspect's alleged offense really warrants a balls-to-the-walls violent arrest that could result in someone getting seriously injured or killed. They need to consider how far it's worth escalating a nonviolent situation in order to arrest their suspect. Even more importantly, they need to realize that they are in fact never justified in escalating the situation in the first place: Rather, they must use force only when provoked by violent action or the presence of a weapon (not by "disrespect" or other empty words)...and the force they use must be the least amount of force necessary to reasonably ensure their own safety and that of others (I say reasonably because nothing in life is 100% guaranteed).
This case in particular was an instance of cops escalating the process of arrest WAY beyond what their suspect's alleged offense warranted, and on top of that, it was done to a sixteen year old kid with a broken back...absolutely ridiculous. They were called in presumably to check on this kid's safety, and instead they almost killed him trying to arrest him. Common sense is indeed something people seem to lack these days.
(It also shouldn't surprise anyone here, but according to wikipedia and its numerous listed references, "[Psychopaths] are overrepresented in prison systems, politics, law enforcement agencies, law firms, and in the media." Go figure - I wonder what would attract such people to these positions of power or land them in prison?

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