Sentencing phase starting now. Watching live.
From what I could see, she deserved to be found guilty. From what I knew of the case and I admit, my knowledge is limited,I am sure I would have found her guilty of at least manslaughter and possibly murder.
It varies a lot from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. It costs money to give officers good training and in smaller departments or ones where they lack resources, it wouldn't be surprising that it might be deficient. Just assuming that she received good training I think is a mistake.
I'm not sure if shooting was actually instinctual,
"We believe that Botham's life mattered and we want a sentence that reflects that," Lee Merritt, an attorney for Jean family said ..."
WTH????
Implying that if someone's like did NOT matter, sentencing should also reflect that fact?
Ah, okay. Are there a lot of self-declared Reapers out there?
The other options available to her were discussed at length up thread, and it was widely agreed that she made the worst possible choice short of calling in an air strike.
I'm not sure if shooting was actually instinctual, though, as much as the preferred option. That is much more my concern in these sordid tales. Police or citizens firing should be the absolute last resort, hands down no other option lest self or others face grave peril.
If the news is to be believed, quite a few. Cops shooting unarmed men are a regular reporting.
Yes, but are there a lot of self-declared Reapers out there?
Your post about police training.
Also you misrepsented my "argument" about jury nullification.
Which is: "What if they didn't think the prosecution carried its burden of proof, but gave them a pass because they wanted convict anyway; or what if they thought there was no crime in the law, but believed there should be, and so convicted anyway?"
The way I see it, the jury finding a crime where none exists in law is just the other side of the same nullification coin as not finding a crime where one does exist in law.
And this is, to me, much more interesting than the boring claim that police should get proper training.
And that itself is a misrepresentation of the actual complaint, which is that some police aren't receiving the proper training. My question is, which police are those, specifically.
We should want all police to get proper training, is perhaps the least useful reply possible to that question. Were you going for uselessness on purpose, or did you honestly believe that's what was being asked?
And of course why bother remembering your BS descalation training when it is all about taking control of the situation on the streets?
Texas has capital punishment:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Texas#Execution_procedure
Is the person administering the lethal injection a murderer under Texas law?
It's part of their training. At least that is what my friend says. People get shot and they keep moving forward sometimes not even realizing they have been shot. There are lots of examples where after receiving a fatal shot they keep attacking only to die later.
Maybe it shouldn't be. Which has been an argument I've had with my friend.
She blames lack of training for her actions. This is a self-serving claim that should be taken with a grain of salt. Do you have reason to believe that Guyger's actions were a result of poor training? Because if this was really a training failure, then the defense screwed up big time by not marshaling that evidence and making that argument at trial. "Guyger did the best she could, but her department set her up to fail" would probably have played a lot better with the jury than "oops, my bad!"
Also, let's not conflate the question of training - the question actually before us - with questiosn of hiring, supervision, etc.
Anyway, my impression is that Guyger was kind of a garbage cop whose professional shortcomings couldn't really be fixed by more training. Better hiring or supervisory practices, maybe. But that's not the question. Certainly there doesn't seem to be any serious complaints about Dallas PD training, in this case. My guess is that Dallas cops are reasonably well trained, and that Guyger is kind of a Kevin.
Which brings us back around to my question: Which cops, specifically, aren't getting the proper training they need? Guyger? All half a million of them?
Yes, but are there a lot of self-declared Reapers out there?
I just read an article that said "The 12-member jury reached its verdict after deliberating for less than two days. "
I wonder if they deliberated at all??
Boring.
Its considered unprofessional to explain jokes : )