Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
ftfyFrom one poster. We've [imagined we've seen] a lot more no holds barred anti-cop posters.
ftfyFrom one poster. We've [imagined we've seen] a lot more no holds barred anti-cop posters.
"No good reason" ? Ha!
Let me explain something here. When there is an ongoing, active investigation with eyewitnesses apparently still surfacing (according to you yourself) there is VERY good reason not to release materials related to that investigation until it has concluded, or at least the evidence gathering phase has concluded.
Here's another eyewitness who says Brown had his hands up, saying "don't shoot!"
http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-ferguson-michael-brown-20140817-story.html
So she says he was on his knees with his hands up when he was shot in the head. Who wants to dismiss what she says here? Who thinks it's important that Mike Brown stole some cigarillos prior to this happening?
So in your version, it's much more likely an unarmed Brown would aggressively charge at an armed officer 30 feet away who was firing his weapon? That's logical to you?
Or are you trying to say Brown's death was his own fault because he wasn't smart as you believe you would have been?
I can't imagine any reasonable scenario that Brown would charge the cop except turning around to surrender. I can imagine Brown running out of initial fear after being shot, realizing after a few more seconds to think that he wasn't going to make it and trying to surrender.
I see. So black witnesses will see the official story from the police and lie and twist their story to make it fit what the witnesses say, because they are dishonest, and to further demonstrate their inherent, dare I say "genetic" dishonesty. However, conversely, releasing witness testimony and video from the convenience store won't allow the police to similarly backdate their story as well?
Fascinating.
A big part of the problem is, we simply don't have the officer's side of the story. We have various stories from the local police chief, yes, but I think that the report from the actual officer would tell us much more clearly what happened.
"The genesis of this was a physical confrontation," Jon Belmar, chief of the St. Louis County Police Department, said at a Sunday news conference. The officer tried to leave his vehicle just before the shooting on Saturday afternoon, but Brown pushed him back into the car, "where he physically assaulted the police officer" and struggled over the officer's weapon, Belmar said.
A shot was fired inside the police car, and Brown was eventually shot about 35 feet away from the vehicle, Belmar said, adding few details because he didn't want to "prejudice" the case. Link
Correct, and a lot of this thread is just speculation.
I think we'll have a better idea of a lot of the details in the next week or so.
LOL
Doesn't have the ring of truth to it. Executing a man with a headshot (requires calm aim) while he was on his knees and pleading for his life, in broad daylight with witnesses around, sounds like a load of ********. If anything, this is evidence in support of Wilson -- because it shows that some in the community are totally willing to lie about what they saw, in hopes that Wilson will be convicted of something he didn't do.
And yes, it is VERY important that Michael Brown perpetrated a strong-arm robbery through physical force and fear just minutes prior to his encounter with Wilson.
Early in this case, there was a story circulating twitter that purported to tell the officer's side of the story. It had little credibility at the time, but many of the things mentioned in this account have now been confirmed by the police chief. One thing that hasn't been confirmed, but is very important to Wilson's defense, is the extent of his facial injuries. In this account, Wilson was beaten so badly that one of his eyes had swollen shut. If true, that strongly supports a self-defense claim or at the very least a manslaughter claim. After the beating he may not have been thinking clearly and fired at a surrendering Brown, who was walking toward him.
LOL
Doesn't have the ring of truth to it.
So in your version, it's much more likely an unarmed Brown would aggressively charge at an armed officer 30 feet away who was firing his weapon? That's logical to you?
Or are you trying to say Brown's death was his own fault because he wasn't smart as you believe you would have been?
I can't imagine any reasonable scenario that Brown would charge the cop except turning around to surrender. I can imagine Brown running out of initial fear after being shot, realizing after a few more seconds to think that he wasn't going to make it and trying to surrender.
I can also imagine Wilson, hyped on adrenalin, believing Brown was a threat, seeing a weapon that wasn't there. Imagining that big scary black kid was dangerous despite the fact Wilson was tens of feet away and Wilson had a drawn weapon. I can imagine Wilson shooting at first out the car window either accidentally or because Brown was tussling with him. Then shooting unnecessarily without thinking in the heat of the moment chasing Brown.
Wilson made mistake after mistake and given the fatal consequences, should be held accountable. What level that accountability should be depends on that autopsy.
To see that video and not see he is the very definition of a thug is cognitive dissonance.
Since there has been so much speculation in this thread based on the flimsiest of evidence, Im gonna join the crowd and explain what happened/will happen:
Wilson attempts to stop Brown. Brown (perhaps due to his earlier robbery) resists and gets in a struggle, may have reached for Wilson's gun. Wilson becomes enraged that Brown has attempted to kill him, so he shoots down Brown in cold blood, despite Brown attempting to surrender at this point. The correct charge is manslaughter, but to appease the community he is charged with murder. I won't predict the trial outcome, since ive already speculated way too much already...![]()
I agree that this womans story sounds like bull. A cop executing a man on his knees, hands up in front of witnesses...does that happen in real life? I'm not taking sides on the overall story yet, but this sounds almost silly.
I'm not sure if it was under oath but I consider a police officer who has gone through extensive background checks and been on the force for six years with apparently no complaints against him, to be more reliable than Dorian Johnson and yes even more reliable than the various witnesses around.
If you label anyone who is skeptical as to whether this shooting is justifiable or not as "anti-cop" you make any kind of rational or objective discussion pretty much impossible. In reality I think most intelligent people are waiting for the facts to come out while recognizing it is conceivable the eyewitness accounts are plausible. It is possible to hold those two viewpoints.
- Wait for all the facts to come out.
- Eyewitness accounts may be accurate.
Wow, a disturbingly large portion of posters here think cigar theft deserves summary execution.
Yes, I've lumped everyone that made any attempt to validate the cigar theft aspect of this as being in that group. Don't argue with me about it. You are now in it in my mind and will never escape it.
Good day to you.
Jennings closed its police department in late 2011 in the wake of a federal probe into the theft of grant money, and turned public safety over to St. Louis County Police. Link