WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2003
- Messages
- 59,856
Kinky sex play?Cops are supposed to run away from criminals? What the hell are the handcuffs for?
Kinky sex play?Cops are supposed to run away from criminals? What the hell are the handcuffs for?
I'll say it more clearly. The chase and all shooting didn't have to happen. He could have retreated by placing his vehicle in drive and pressing the gas pedal before the chase.
After the chase and the shots fired, he could have likely outrun a guy with several bullet wounds in him.
Cops are supposed to avoid force and use lethal force when every other means fails.
Wilson did not have to pursue the perp on foot after he nearly lost his weapon to Brown.
He made a judgement error when he went after this dangerous crazed felon alone knowing that backup was moments away. He had an HT surely, and could have reported suspect fleeing north on foot, etc. It happens all the time. The identity of the suspect was very likely known since there were so many witnesses
Firing a weapon in a residential neighborhood to subdue a guy who stole a few items, threatened a shop owner and hit a cop is crazy unless that perp is on his way to abduct or kill someone.
As for my questions about Wilson's characteristics, personality and medications, they are very relevant. In particular, anabolic steroid rage is poorly understood but might account for quite a few murders these days. Low self esteem is also very relevant when discovered in the personality of a police officer. Some cops drop out because they cannot get beyond their rage at being called names.
I think you misunderstood that part. I haven't found any source that says that's what he told ABC's George Stephanopoulos, and it's certainly not what he told the Grand Jury and there's nothing that indicates that in the physical evidence of shell casing locations.
Nice come back, care to disprove anything I stated?
He had 30kg on Wilson. This is a fact.
He was enraged, stated by Wilson, and also his actions
He was stoned, Autopsy results showed 150% the level of Impairment for THC
He was Homicidal. He was charging a cop after having tried to take the cop's gun, it wasn't like he intended to run over and shake hands.
He was charging, stated by Wilson, backed up by 2 independent witness and others stated that he was moving towards Wilson.
Ball is in your court.
Point taken.I was just pointing out that your judgement of "superficial" was premature and should and was performed by competent medical personel.
If Wilson was charged and brought to trial, that is still no guarantee that anyone would be able to cross examine Wilson. Defendants do not have to take the stand, fifth amendment stuff. Him testifying for the grand jury, in effect was allowing a cross examination. The way I understand it, he was open to any and all questions brought by the grand jury.
He was not justified in killing Brown, but he was justified in using deadly force to stop Brown, after Brown refused to comply with Wilson's repeated instructions to get on the ground. Fleeing is not part of the job description.
You can't be serious. Talk about glossing over some important facts. If you hit a cop and try to take his....
Troll.
Cops are supposed to run away from criminals? What the hell are the handcuffs for?
It's sort of funny. In our cop shows we often see the hero charging in without backup, chasing the bad guy for miles, bullets being exchanged in both directions, and we cheer them on.
A cop dares to do it in real life, and he's pegged by many as a psychopathic bully because he didn't cower in his car and wait for backup. Who'd want the job?
Michael Brown was 6'4", and weighed 290 pounds. Darrell Wilson is 6'4" and weighs 215. I don't see how that relates. Wilson was in a police cruiser. Wilson had a car and foot. One of his options was move backward or forward and distance himself from Brown.
I don't think that grand juries should even exist anymore given that they are usually a rubber stamp.
But prosecutors that don't use them as rubber stamps don't really want to go to trial but want to shift the blame of that to the grand jury.
We had a shooting here where the criminal was armed with an aluminium baseball bat and after forcing two officers about 50m down the street, closing the gap from 30m to 10m, one of them believed that they were about to be backed into a corner, and fired, killing the guy. He ended up facing a murder charge from a private prosecution, and was found not guilty. I read all the testimonies, what happened was extremely obvious to anyone that bothered reading the witness statements and the reports (which the police put online). There are still people that believe and claim it was a deliberate murder.
I firmly believe that some people are of the opinion that the Police should do everything to protect the life of criminals that given have the chance would show exactly no mercy to those same police officers, including running away and letting the violent thug get away rather than having the Officers try and sort the situation out because it might mean that the officers end up killing them in self defence.
I disagree, especially in trial by twitter/tabloid cases like this. Consider how this got started, a lot of bogus and/or incomplete information was disseminated through the ether causing a firestorm on social media that the more traditional networks picked up on, fueling the conflagration. There never was any good evidence of two jaywalkers being accosted and then one gunned down by a crazed police officer, that was a narrative invented off of said bogus/incomplete evidence that drew people to Ferguson to protest in outrage. However somehow the fact that Michael Brown and Dorian Johnson had just been involved in a strong-armed robbery went unnoticed by the outlets spewing forth the false narrative despite the fact this video was posted the day after the shooting and specifically refers to the theft of the cigarillos. It would take the media propagating that false narrative five days to 'discover' this fact, many of whom would decry the release of that information to the extent that the governor of the state would condemn the release of actual germane information on the case which called into question the false narrative!
In a media environment like that there ought to be a check on the case going forward, one done by those who don't have to bow to public pressure because they convene in secrecy. It just so happens a Grand Jury meets that criteria and in an instance like this is the perfect mechanism for ending a case that has no business going forward. It's also perfectly aligned with the purpose of a Grand Jury which is to ensure the state has a legitimate case before ruining beyond recognition someone's life with a trial and wasting the resources of the state on a weak case.
I think the Grand Jury deserves the credit in this case, the blame ought to go to those who propagated the false narrative.
This whole argument of "well the officer should not have put himself in that situation!" Is so incredibly idiotic it reminds me of the people who blame rape victims for getting raped because they were in a bad situation. So you are telling me officer wilson was wrong for trying to do his job? It was his fault that michael brown attacked him? Could he have not pursued brown? Sure. But he chose to pursue the violent criminal (as police officers normally do). It was Michael Browns fault deadly force had to be used, not Wilsons. Brown committed a felony of assaulting a police officer (possibly attempted murder of going for his gun). Brown could have chose to lay down. He chose to charge at the officer. Brown started the entire altercation. Get back to reality people and stop blaming the real victim, which is wilson.
Brown put wilson in an incredibly dangerous situation. He attacked a police officer. Lets not forget that.
Wilson is the professional with the training and the experience. When he realizes he can't handle Brown physically, the right move is to get backup.
As soon as Wilson gets out of the vehicle, he's stacked the deck by reducing the options. Wilson has knowingly increased his risk and upped the ante. Brown is either going to comply, or die. And, since Brown has already reacted violently at the first confrontation, the odds are Wilson will be killing him.
No criminal charges will be filed. Wilson could still get fired for his poor judgement. Otherwise, these situations will continue to occur.
Exactly. Brown was running away from Wilson. Running after him shooting in a crowded street might be SOP for Ferguson Police, but not for any decent police force.
Sorry, I should go back lurking. I'm spoiling the glee of those celebrating the shooting and exoneration of Wilson.
Exactly. Brown was running away from Wilson. Running after him shooting in a crowded street might be SOP for Ferguson Police, but not for any decent police force.
Sorry, I should go back lurking. I'm spoiling the glee of those celebrating the shooting and exoneration of Wilson.
Good thing that didn't happen.
Wilson started firing shots only after Brown charged him. He paused to consider the situation two or three times but Brown didn't stop charging until a bullet struck him in the head.
It's sort of funny. In our cop shows we often see the hero charging in without backup, chasing the bad guy for miles, bullets being exchanged in both directions, and we cheer them on.
A cop dares to do it in real life, and he's pegged by many as a psychopathic bully because he didn't cower in his car and wait for backup. Who'd want the job?