Maybe, but they’re not very good at that. Maybe it’s from training them like soldiers. Aim center mass, fire until the threat is eliminated. Maximize your damage to the target. Hooah.
Gosh golly, the entire field of experts, not a single dissenting voice among them.
A sheriff’s deputy is suspected of deliberately burning an inmate in the Orange County Jail’s mental health section with hot water, Sheriff Don Barnes said Wednesday.
I know it's frustrating to be told you're wrong, but now you're just being ridiculous. Yes, I'm sure there are dissenting voices.
Do you still doubt climate change, though?
Face it:
1) Shooting limbs is extremely hard, and thus dangerous if you're facing a suspect that you think you should shoot.
2) Shooting a limb is very likely to kill the suspect anyway, so shoot the center of mass that's easier to hit.
3) If you miss, you might hit other people.
Stop arguing this point. You are wrong.
I only saw the body cam but this one was a justified shooting. The boy turned and the officer fired in less than a second. The boy had the weapon through the chase. I'm sure others will disagree.
Got any response for why cops need to shoot when someone is obeying their orders? Cop ordered him to drop the gun and put his hands up which he did, so the cop shot him as per protocol apparently.
Seems the cop decided he was going to kill the kid before actually shooting the orders to drop the gun and put hands up where just to make the killing easier.
I guess the kid didn't follow orders because he didn't drop the gun in a way that the policeman could see. The trouble was that he couldn't have followed orders having discarded the gun previously.
Many police forces in Europe disagree with you
Almost all of the above verbiage indicates a lack of understanding of the actual physiological and psychological effects of being involved in such a situation.
I’ve written about this before. Under the stress of a shooting situation, officers, regardless of training, tend to suffer tunnel vision, hearing impairment, loss of fine motor control, etc, etc.
“Target fixation” is another effect.... Being unaware of anything but the threat in front of you.
They’ve been conditioned. Police officers, who may go an entire career without drawing their gun
I just posted a link to a place that trains warning shots and shoot the legs.
.....
'Wrinkling his face, he replied, “You don’t think you can hit a leg at a distance of three to six feet?”
He grinned at me, “If he is shooting at you? Well, then we use lethal shots — two to the chest, one to the head.”
It's not my opinion. It's the opinion of most trained police forces.
So how successful are those "many" forces at shooting limbs and not hitting an artery?
I guess the kid didn't follow orders because he didn't drop the gun in a way that the policeman could see. The trouble was that he couldn't have followed orders having discarded the gun previously.
From the policeman's perspective he didn't see a weapon drop and saw hands move and concluded that he should shoot.
Better training may have prevented the killing, then again if the police behave like an occupying force then they're going to do this kind of thing. IMO it's a vicious circle.
A big part of the problem is that cops are permitted to kill people based on what they guess or suspect: "He reached into his pocket, so there must have been a gun," when the guy was pulling out his wallet.
No.
This flight of fancy of warning shots and shoot to wound is insane.
Most police forces in the USA you mean?