TragicMonkey
Poisoned Waffles
It's gonna be the "LOL I went into the wrong apartment, oopsie daisy then I feared for my life" argument again.
This one seems even worse. "He fought back when we tried to murder him, so we feared for our lives!"
It's gonna be the "LOL I went into the wrong apartment, oopsie daisy then I feared for my life" argument again.
This one seems even worse. "He fought back when we tried to murder him, so we feared for our lives!"
My comment about "white road" comes from a quote from the 911 call.
The dispatcher asked what Arbery was doing to be warrant apprehension, and the response was
"He's a black guy running down our road".
I have also not seen the video, but a report I read says that the video pretty unequivocally shows that a shot was fired before the altercation in which the man was then murdered.
It is this initial shot at the jogger while he was jogging that changes this case from an arrest gone wrong to an outright murder, if not a lynching.
The first report I saw of this suggested that there would be no prosecution, but I see from the one cited here that this case will now be sent to a grand jury. Thank goodness for eyewitness videos to counteract the outright lies of the police.
I think Bogative is all wet here. There is plenty of evidence that this was an unlawful act on the part of the shooters, that the victim was innocent, and that the police initially lied about the incident. Even if you can't see the video, others surely have, including, apparently, Georgia television viewers. The decision of the DA to prosecute, and the Governor to provide resources, should, I think, be given due weight.
My comment about "white road" comes from a quote from the 911 call.
The dispatcher asked what Arbery was doing to be warrant apprehension, and the response was
"He's a black guy running down our road".
Not busting your chops about 'white road's. You know how a small editorializing can shift a narrative. It's not like they made such a claim, which would be shocking to say the least.
I'm inclined to think this was an ex cop who still thought he was a cop. I'd also like to know what this description was that Arbery was said to match. 'Big black guy', maybe? Not remotely good enough to start brandishing shotguns. Sounds like an ex cop who thinks black guy's are second class citizens who are all 'suspects' till proven not shot.
This one seems even worse. "He fought back when we tried to murder him, so we feared for our lives!"
It's gonna be the "LOL I went into the wrong apartment, oopsie daisy then I feared for my life" argument again.
You may be technically right that they did not say "white roads," but it might depend a little on whether "our road" has any blacks on it. If an unidentified black man, labelled by his blackness, is considered an invader on "our road" it is pretty obvious that "our road" is not one frequented by black people.
I know you sometimes consider non-racist as the default position unless there's other proof, a position that's often unpopular and sometimes right, but I think in this case it's reasonable to presume the reverse.
As Ron Obvious noted above, there is a world of difference.
'On our road, the one on which we live, we haven't seen a black man in 50 years, except for a recently reported burglary suspect'
is quite a bit different from
'This is a white road, where we gun down darkies'
The rednecks are in the wrong either way, but very different in motivations. The devil is in the spin.
How is one supposed to make a citizens arrest if the person doesn't stop?
Why is someone supposed to make a citizens arrest in the absence of a crime?
Could an actual cop have arrested Arbery for anything?
No crime = no cause for arrest, citizen or LEO. The rednecks waved their guns around. Arbery took a run at shotgun boy. This was not ending well in any scenario.
I have no opinion on your first question.
As to your second question, cops are generally protected if they arrest someone for a suspected crime that they incorrectly suspect.
I think it likely that the rednecks did think Arbery matched the description of a previously reported 'suspicious person' though.
What was the description, and did he really match it? In more than skin colour, I mean.
Citizens arrest is widely understood to be a legally risky proposition. Private citizens are not granted the same broad immunity to make mistakes of fact like the police.
A private citizen is facing a lot more strict liability than a cop.