Skeptic Tank
Trigger Warning
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2013
- Messages
- 3,121
Well that settles it then
Does it?
I'd say this is significantly more complicated than that.
There are a whole host of possibilities:
1.) These officers saw the tail end of what had happened, including Officer Tensing falling onto the ground and having to get back up, and even some of the dragging. However, when pressed on the matter by the prosecutors, they conceded that they only looked directly at Tensing after the shot being fired, catching their attention, and thus were not in a position to definitively state whether the dragging began prior to that or not.
2.) Same as #1 above, but without seeing any dragging at all. Officers may have conceded that they merely assumed dragging had taken place due to seeing Tensing have to get up off the ground, and noting that he appeared to be doing so several feet down the street from where the car had been parked during the traffic stop.
3.) Another possibility is that they really did see everything they had indicated they saw, but it was impressed upon them by the prosecutor that they could either assist in throwing Officer Tensing under the bus or they could join him there.
4.) Lastly, there is of course the possibility everyone here will immediately embrace. They may have claimed to have seen everything which backed Tensing's account up without actually having seen it, because they sympathized with a fellow officer who'd just been involved in his first shooting, they were aware of how bad a situation it is to be the white cop who just shot a black guy in a city which has had several black riots over the last several decades, and they felt solidarity in several ways with a fellow officer and wanted to back him up. In this scenario, the prosecutors have legitimately exposed this.
Regardless of any of these possibilities, a couple of things are clear from the two body cams we've seen. The first is that Officer Tensing absolutely is rapidly brought what looks to be in excess of 20 feet down the street in exact lockstep with the car's movements until he dislodges, falls down, and has to get back up. If people want to dispute whether what happened in that regard deserves to be called "dragging" or not, or whether he was only attached to the car because he held onto it, that's another discussion. What there cannot be is dispute that he was taken along with the car down the street for a significant distance.
The other thing which cannot be disputed is that the 2nd body cam shows that at least one of these other officers got there in time to see him on the ground, down the street, having to get back up onto his feet. Based on the timing of that video, it also seems clear that this officer also saw some of the dragging of Officer Tensing prior to that, but that his body cam didn't pick it up.
We're beyond the point of dispute about him being dragged, IMO. The only real debate now is whether the dragging was actually more of a situation of him deliberately holding on then letting go, as opposed to being somewhat entangled with the car briefly, AND perhaps most importantly, whether the dragging began a moment before the shot or not.
