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Here we go again. So what if German police only fired 85 rounds. Small difference in sample size among other fallacies.
So why is it that German police don't have the same "muscle memory" that causes them to blast away as soon as they've fired once? Or perhaps that isn't your claim? So what is your claim and how does it explain Wilson firing three more shots at the head of a guy without a gun or knife after the guy already has several bullets in him and in the most likely scenario is just falling towards the ground and is certainly falling towards the ground when he is hit by the bullet that goes through the top of his head?
Do you think all the American police that show restraint with their weapons even after they've fired once should be retrained so they can acquire this "muscle memory" that requires them to keep shooting as soon as they've fired once?
3. Is this video what you mean by muscle memory?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/20/kajieme-powell-shooting_n_5696546.html
I guess you've never heard of the Tueller Drill.
I hadn't before this thread but I had seen the Mythbuster's episode but I didn't remember the term from that show.
So how does the Tueller drill explain the shooting of a individual that was actually moving away from the police at the time the police let go their fusillade? Why were those cops even issued Tasers if this wasn't an appropriate time to use them? There are plenty of cops present to shoot the guy if something unexpected happens so the use of a Taser if it was even necessary at all seems like a far better choice.
Or are you so steeped in the lore of "muscle memory" that even cops shooting at an individual that was moving away from them represents a fair game target because their "muscle memory" is just too deeply ingrained to allow any conscious control of their gun?
ETA: My guess is that Wilson was a cowardly jerk that often used the color of his authority to act rudely and hassle people. I don't have much evidence to support that. There is the Arman video and at least one citizen that has come forward to describe a similar encounter with Wilson. In addition there is a long period in Wilson's career where the police decided not to keep records of complaints suggesting a long standing approach to policing in Ferguson in which the police were inadequately monitored for inappropriate behavior. I also think that Wilson is lying about the reason he drove back to confront Brown and Johnson. If it was his goal to arrest them in the safest way possible he would have moved forward and kept them under surveillance until backup arrived. His approach put himself unnecessarily in harms way, was against the common theory of policing that the safest way for everybody involved to arrest a a potentially difficult individual is with the use of overwhelming force and it made it more likely that the suspects would flee in a way that he couldn't do anything about except shoot them.
I also suspect that Wilson was a coward. He didn't mind hassling people when he thought there was no risk to himself but when he experienced personal risk he blasted away rather than attempt any other alternatives.
But as I have stated several times, in order for any of these theories to be useful in the prosecution of Wilson in a beyond a reasonable doubt situation the evidence would need to have been stronger. But I still think there is enough here that justifies a complete reexamination of the use of force by the Ferguson police, a complete reexamination of their policies for curtailing abuses by the police and potentially sanctions against Wilson for violations of police policy in this incident.
Reheat's ideas about "muscle memory" and the justification for almost any police shootings where there is the slightest evidence of the possible justification for it would be right in my opinion in a situation where timely backup for a policeman was unlikely. That wasn't the case in the Brown shooting and it was categorically not the case in the Powell shooting.