Author Topic: Another victim of 'officer safety'  (Read 8015 times)

æg151337

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #25 on: August 10, 2013, 01:15:38 PM »
Not to compare an elderly veteran to a baby deer, but this case sorta reminds me of Giggles, Also taken out by overzealous authorities.
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tokugawa

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #26 on: August 10, 2013, 04:50:02 PM »
They see enforcing "compliance" as a legitimate way to protect society and themselves.

 Cops are not hired for introspection or imagination and most probably have never thought much about the long term corrosive effects of the increasing separation of themselves from the society they "serve".

 If this trend continues long enough, as well as them seeing the public as an "enemy" ,or just "civilians"  the public may start seeing them as an enemy. When normal policing duties are carried out with an armored car and a full fire team, it will be at that point-the police will have become domestic military occupiers.

 I wonder if the academies teach  Robert Peels principals of policing. Sure seems like it has been forgotten.

HankB

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #27 on: August 10, 2013, 05:13:24 PM »
I wonder if the cops knew the old man had no younger male next-of-kin who'd seek justice on their own if denied by the court . . .
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Levant

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #28 on: August 10, 2013, 10:19:41 PM »
couple questions
was there a knife?
why were cops there?  if the staff could handle him fine why did they call cops?


we had a guy in his 80's kill his roomy in a home here    picked him up over his head and body slammed him   some older folks get mean   

I always count on you to find a way to defend any craziness the government or the police pull.  Thanks for being always meeting my expectations.
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Levant

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #29 on: August 10, 2013, 10:30:41 PM »
http://www.rocklandtimes.com/2013/08/08/police-killing-of-95-year-old-war-hero-in-illinois-outrages-nation/

Is it just me or is this kind of crap getting both more common and more brazen every day?

No.  This is  not getting more common or more brazen.  This does not compare to any stupid use of a taser or bean bag that I have ever heard before.  If this doesn't get the local residents up in arms to fire the entire Park Forest police department then we may as well all just surrender.  This is the most outrageous police brutality case I have heard of in a long time.

Quote from: tokugawa
That is a damn good question- whenever these sorts of subjects are brought up, there is always a retired cop somewhere who says he got out because of this crap , or how the new hires are all bullies etc.

I guess my experience in the forums has been different.  What I usually see is retired or current cops saying that we don't know the whole story and we don't know what happened off the tape before some atrocity happened on camera or that we're cop bashing if we challenge any cop behavior.

We all need to remember, the police are the armed enforcement branch of the government of which we are already so wary.  That's the good cops.  It goes downhill from there.
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Perd Hapley

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #30 on: August 10, 2013, 10:46:54 PM »
I guess my experience in the forums has been different.  What I usually see is retired or current cops saying that we don't know the whole story and we don't know what happened off the tape before some atrocity happened on camera...

Which is very often true. Maybe not in this case, but cops get Zimmerman-ed by the press just as much as anybody else.

Or should I say they get Brian Ross-ed?
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Blakenzy

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #31 on: August 10, 2013, 11:30:13 PM »
As it is above, it is below...

I think these occurrences are just manifestations of what is going on at higher levels...  These insane "LEO" on "Citizen" interactions are just a trickle-down of the current State vs the People paradigm. The velvet glove is getting threadbare.
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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #32 on: August 10, 2013, 11:57:40 PM »
I recently bought a taser from a gun show which got me googling the subject. I was surprised to find that whenever i searched anything taser related i got quite a few articles popping up about police, not just in the U.S., stunning small children and old people. There was a pretty interesting topic on the TED talks on the excessive use of non-lethal force in law enforcement. I don't remember the statistics of the top of my head. Here's a link

http://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_coleman_the_moral_dangers_of_non_lethal_weapons.html

Anywho, wtf.

I took taser/nightstick/pepperspay training.
I was told by my professional instructors that the proper term was "less then lethal" not "non lethal"because it can be lethal.
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Levant

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #33 on: August 11, 2013, 12:18:06 AM »
As it is above, it is below...

I think these occurrences are just manifestations of what is going on at higher levels...  These insane "LEO" on "Citizen" interactions are just a trickle-down of the current State vs the People paradigm. The velvet glove is getting threadbare.

You make a good point and remind me of one.  When I go into any business and the minimum-wage-or-near-so clerk is rude or service is bad, I am never rude or upset with the clerk.  I am a firm believer in the theorem that all problems are management problems.  I have found across many years of leading people that, almost without exception, people meet the expectations set of them.  When employees are rude that's because their management probably behaves the same way and they are replicating that behavior.  At best it is because they know their management either does not care or does not implement mechanisms by which they can identify bad behavior.

I don't think the police are so different in that regard.  They are doing what they believe their bosses expect them to do - or at least know their bosses will allow them to do.  The effects of bad policing are so much more serious than bad service at McDonald's that the police definitely need to be held to a higher standard and, like any one, when their actions turn violence they need to be held personally accountable.  Even so, in the end, they are doing what their bosses allow or expect them to do.  This is not just a street cop problem.  It's a management problem.  Whoever failed to set the right standards and expectation in these officers need to go.  The cops need to be prosecuted for causing a death while committing a felony and put to death.  Unfortunately, Illinois outlawed the death penalty in 2011 so we should only settle for life without parole.  Their managers, chief, and city leaders need to be charged as accomplices.


I took taser/nightstick/pepperspay training.
I was told by my professional instructors that the proper term was "less then lethal" not "non lethal"because it can be lethal.

Then it ain't less-than-lethal either.  Dead is dead, not less than dead.
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zxcvbob

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #34 on: August 11, 2013, 12:53:59 AM »
I think "less lethal" is the right term.
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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #35 on: August 11, 2013, 04:16:11 AM »
Never mind the cops, What makes people think it's OK to force a 95 year old man into surgery? 

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #36 on: August 11, 2013, 12:52:52 PM »
Never mind the cops, What makes people think it's OK to force a 95 year old man into surgery?


This
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Levant

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #37 on: August 11, 2013, 04:32:41 PM »
Never mind the cops, What makes people think it's OK to force a 95 year old man into surgery? 

Obamacare will fix that.
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tokugawa

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #38 on: August 11, 2013, 05:16:54 PM »
Never mind the cops, What makes people think it's OK to force a 95 year old man into surgery? 

 If he went willingly, how would they know they had power?  Force, is proof of power. That is why tyranny descends into a fine mesh of laws- in order to be able to force-  force is the POINT of of power. Only when someone is forced, can the bullies be sure of power.
 

Perd Hapley

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #39 on: August 12, 2013, 10:06:19 PM »
I don't think the police are so different in that regard.  They are doing what they believe their bosses expect them to do - or at least know their bosses will allow them to do.  The effects of bad policing are so much more serious than bad service at McDonald's that the police definitely need to be held to a higher standard and, like any one, when their actions turn violence they need to be held personally accountable.  Even so, in the end, they are doing what their bosses allow or expect them to do.  This is not just a street cop problem.  It's a management problem.  Whoever failed to set the right standards and expectation in these officers need to go.  The cops need to be prosecuted for causing a death while committing a felony and put to death.  Unfortunately, Illinois outlawed the death penalty in 2011 so we should only settle for life without parole.  Their managers, chief, and city leaders need to be charged as accomplices.



I've been thinking about that lately. I don't dislike police, and I don't have a problem with police, per se. They are doing what society has asked them to do. Like so many other problems, it won't be solved unless the leadership, from the local level, right up the Presidency, is reformed.
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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #40 on: August 12, 2013, 10:30:42 PM »

I've been thinking about that lately. I don't dislike police, and I don't have a problem with police, per se. They are doing what society has asked them to do. Like so many other problems, it won't be solved unless the leadership, from the local level, right up the Presidency, is reformed.

If an institution requires reform at every level of society or near-perfect leadership to properly function IAW the COTUS, perhaps the more practical solution is to jettison the institution or seriously re-think its scope?
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Levant

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #41 on: August 13, 2013, 12:05:39 PM »

I've been thinking about that lately. I don't dislike police, and I don't have a problem with police, per se. They are doing what society has asked them to do. Like so many other problems, it won't be solved unless the leadership, from the local level, right up the Presidency, is reformed.

That's a great point and I agree but just because management allows or overlooks the behavior doesn't eliminate the personal blame of the street cop who does the beating or the cops who don't stop it or who overlook it.

I don't have a problem with all cops but I have a problem with the ones who shot this guy with a taser and who shot him with a beanbag and all those who either apparently lied about the butcher knife or went along with the apparent lie.

Quote
Tough police claimed Wrana had armed himself with a 12-inch butcher knife, staff explained they did not see any weapon when they were in his room. Wrana was also seated at the time of the incident, casting further doubt on police claims that he needed to be forcefully subdued, especially with equipment typically used for riot control.
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tokugawa

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #42 on: August 13, 2013, 02:46:04 PM »
On a tangent,why is it every time a recording surfaces , the cops are all screaming and cursing at once? The general picture is of a poorly trained gang of thugs, rather than a professional police team. It is if their desire to intimidate has overwhelmed any attempt to actually communicate what they want the guy to do. And since when is cursing out citizens considered professional?

zxcvbob

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #43 on: August 13, 2013, 02:54:15 PM »
Not to compare an elderly veteran to a baby deer, but this case sorta reminds me of Giggles, Also taken out by overzealous authorities.

I wonder if "Giggles" was the fawn's name before the raid, or if they named it afterward to make the story sound even more outrageous?
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Tallpine

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #44 on: August 13, 2013, 04:04:18 PM »
I wonder if "Giggles" was the fawn's name before the raid, or if they named it afterward to make the story sound even more outrageous?


The fawn was actually a twin, and had a brother named "Schitz"  :angel:
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Perd Hapley

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #45 on: August 14, 2013, 12:21:09 AM »
That's a great point and I agree but just because management allows or overlooks the behavior doesn't eliminate the personal blame of the street cop who does the beating or the cops who don't stop it or who overlook it.

I don't have a problem with all cops but I have a problem with the ones who shot this guy with a taser and who shot him with a beanbag and all those who either apparently lied about the butcher knife or went along with the apparent lie.


Obviously, some police are just downright bad cops, and deserve all manner of blame and punishment. But most are just doing the heavy-handed, intrusive stuff that is now expected of them. Those are the ones I'm talking about. I may blame them, to some extent, but I don't know how well it works for us to treat them all like the enemy.
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zxcvbob

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #46 on: August 14, 2013, 12:32:21 AM »
I'm sure some of the Nazis were decent people, and The Mob probably has lots of good accountants and secretaries and deliverymen who never broke a single kneecap...
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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #47 on: August 14, 2013, 12:48:21 AM »
On a tangent,why is it every time a recording surfaces , the cops are all screaming and cursing at once? The general picture is of a poorly trained gang of thugs, rather than a professional police team. It is if their desire to intimidate has overwhelmed any attempt to actually communicate what they want the guy to do. And since when is cursing out citizens considered professional?

A big problem regarding this is that it appears they are all trained in an individual manner to use "command voice" to intimidate and confuse their average contact into submission. They all too often don't seem to have any group training (or they disregard it) to defer to one LEO shouting out commands to a suspect. This has certainly led to more than one instance of someone being tased, shot, etc. because they obeyed one command they heard versus another, contradictory command from someone else.

The cursing is another matter entirely (and this is not to say that I agree with "command voice" tactics). All too often you see the cursing when the officers don't think they're being recorded. That open carry guy incident in Philadelphia a couple of years back comes to mind.
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Tallpine

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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #48 on: August 14, 2013, 10:01:34 AM »

Obviously, some police are just downright bad cops, and deserve all manner of blame and punishment. But most are just doing the heavy-handed, intrusive stuff that is now expected of them. Those are the ones I'm talking about. I may blame them, to some extent, but I don't know how well it works for us to treat them all like the enemy.

I don't think that it is working out too well for them to treat us all like the enemy.
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Re: Another victim of 'officer safety'
« Reply #49 on: August 14, 2013, 11:48:46 AM »
I don't think that it is working out too well for them to treat us all like the enemy.

Really?  Looks like they are doing well enough.

Most get pretty good wages, great benefits, mondo pensions, job security, and a union to back them up.
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roo_ster

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