As mentioned above, if someone is handy with a blade, you probably won't have seen it yet.
For sure!
As mentioned above, if someone is handy with a blade, you probably won't have seen it yet.
You mean the woman who has been handling a knife on a regular basis at work for the past year and a half? Can't see how she wouldn't have picked up a few skills handling a blade in that time.....
Ok, so you slice a person like you slice an unmoving pizza. Right then ...
Evidence that please.
Ok, so you slice a person like you slice an unmoving pizza. Right then ...
No, but I'm sure she wasn't inept with a knife.
You said they should have moved out of her way. That's not walking aimlessly, that's walking towards them and you think they should have let her travel past them - where other people were.I cant tell if you're trolling or not. You seem to have trouble following.
If you're wandering aimlessly you can end up in part if a room where there are other people. She could have even been walking towards the door..
No, but I'm sure she wasn't inept with a knife.
That's like saying anyone who isn't inept with a pen will write a bestseller.
The search for an effective non-lethal weapon has been elusive. The problem is that circumstances are difficult to anticipate, and people are highly variable in their reactions.
The police "baton" (don't you love euphemisms) or "night-stick" has been an option for a very long time. Unfortunately, the typical untrained method of using this device is to beat people over the head until they are senseless.
This actually seldom results in them becoming senseless and instead results in the poor sod being severely cut and sometimes concussed. Bleeding profusely and still fighting...
Attempts to employ the baton in a more scientific manner, borrowing techniques from various martial arts styles, have had a limited amount of success. Blows to joints and such are highly effective, but also tend to damage the joints leading to chronic syndromes and large lawsuit awards.
Blows to muscle-mass "pressure points", such as taught in the PPCT (pressure point control tactics) system tend to work quite well...On sober people.
Unfortunately, sober people are not normally in a state of agitation requiring the officer to fight with them.
If they are high on various drugs or drunk, these blows tend to go rather unnoticed.
Chemical weapons have had varying levels of success. We were initially issued the small, personal "tear gas" canisters. They proved woefully ineffective. Some people are simply not susceptible. Again, when drunk or drug-fueled.... They tended not to work at all.
The "Pepper Spray" (Oleoresin Capsicum) is better. I've used it several times with good effect. However, if the person is very motivated or chemically "altered", he can still fight. He may not be able to see... But he can still resist and still must be wrestled into submission.
The Taser... The Taser has great potential, but at best it is somewhat unreliable. The device shoots two wired darts which diverge at a 15 degree angle.
So... There is a "sweet spot" range. Too close, the darts hit close together and there is insufficient tissue mass in between for a good, disabling shock.
Too far... And one dart misses. No effect unless you then thrust the body of the weapon against the person (it has exposed electrodes as well as the darts)
When it works, it works spectacularly well. The individual is rendered quite helpless for the duration of the 5-second pulse, and may be cuffed or otherwise restrained.
The wires attached to the darts are only 15 feet long... So that's your range.
It is intended to take "out of control" people into custody without harming them. It is NOT intended as a self-defense weapon or to be used against an armed and hostile individual...Simply not reliable enough for that purpose.
There are a variety of other "less-than-lethal" weapons available. One is projectile weapons that are designed to fire things that will disable the individual. "Bean bag" rounds. "Baton" rounds. Things like that. Generally launched by modified riot guns or 40mm launchers of the sort used for tear-gas rounds.
These are sometimes effective... But we've seen video of individuals essentially laughing them off.
Not reliable for defensive purposes.
Other devices have been proposed or are in development. The so-called "green laser" or strobe can induce nausea... Sometimes. Haven't heard any more about it in years.
So in short, no less-than-lethal weapon presently available is reliable enough in it's effects to be used for defensive purposes. Most all of them are used in an attempt to take a person into custody who is agitated, insane, threatening... but not actively attacking.
Should such a device become available... The Phaser on "stun"... I'd be first in line to get one, and I suspect police departments would fall all over themselves. "Use of force" is highly problematic for departments and officers as well.
By not being police in a country where people regularly try to kill police.
Any statistics to put that assertion into some kind of context.
64 killed by suspects last year. 5 from stabbings btw.
Its more like saying they have more potential to write one. We won't know until they try. It most likely will turn out to be a bloody mess, but it is still an attempt.
So, the option is then the death penalty, based on potential to cause harm. Is that what you mean?
You said they should have moved out of her way. That's not walking aimlessly, that's walking towards them and you think they should have let her travel past them - where other people were.
Those are your own words, perhaps you have difficulty with the English language?
Incorrect.
64 killed by suspects last year. 5 from stabbings btw.
And apparently UK cops respond just like US cops do if they're armed.
That's some curious "logic" you employ there.
Why?
That now needs context. A search finds that there are about 800,000 sworn personnel police officers in the USA, so with 64 killed that is a death rate of 8 per 100,000.
In 2011 there were 136,261 police in England & Wales with 2 killed. So that is a death rate of 1.4 per 100,000.
I have to admit I was not expecting such a difference and I think Wildcat has (after checking his claim and doing the correct maths) made his point. The US police should be more inclined to go to deadly force in a situation as so many of them get killed.
You have the question wrong. It should be how reasonable the police response was in the circumstances. I think the police will be found to have acted reasonably in this case.
And I will repeat, police shout nt be expected to "take a few knocks" from a person with a knife in the course of their duties.
I'm not inept with a knife. My boning knife, 5" chef and 7" chef now have 36 years in my possession and I use knives every day, rather proficiently.
But if Nessie or Bikewer were to come at me with a baton or pepper spray, I'd probably get taken down while I was trying to figure out how to change the grip from my slicing or chopping grip to a knife-fighting one. (Unless they were cooperative and put their hand(s) on a cutting board and asked me to julienne the first four fingers. I'd be great at that.)
These threads are so informative. For certain definitions of "informative", of course.
You said they should have moved out of her way. That's not walking aimlessly, that's walking towards them and you think they should have let her travel past them - where other people were.
Those are your own words, perhaps you have difficulty with the English language?
What does this so-called analysis have to do with the OP? This thread is about a specific incident, not about the rate of police killings between nations. Start another thread.