Kevin_Lowe
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
Kevin, how much experience do you have in training police officers? He speaks from knowledge of the profession. What I see you doing is speaking from speculation. Have you been a trainer of police officers?
I speak from fact to the extent that facts have been presented. He has presented no facts whatsoever, just an appeal to his own authority. Said authority is highly questionable because his supposedly authoritative statements clash with the available facts.
As the previously linked article about the 21 foot rules states, lots of trainers of police officers have read about the 21 foot rule, taught about the 21 foot rule, but never actually understood the 21 foot rule.
ETA: my brother in law has told me that his rule number one in a potentially violent situation is to try and get control of a situation. In that light, the comments on "why wasn't the partner and the cop both taking this situation on together" are probably questions my brother in law (homicide detective) would also ask.
Agreed, it's very odd, and even the "shoot 'em all!" advocates should have to acknowledge that since the partner could have been helping shoot.
Sure it does. Violated police procedures according to the coroner. They should have waited for backup instead of going in all Rambo with guns a'blazing. Just ask Kevin Lowe. Or as the story stated "Ms Jamieson said Sgt Cahir, a serving officer, may have committed an offence under the Occupational Health and Safety Act."
"An offence under the Occupational Health and Safety Act" <> homicide.
It's exactly what they did.
For pity's sake, you didn't even have to muster up the energy to click on the links I gave you. I summarised the relevant bits for you in post #124.
They wounded him and then sat on their thumbs for an hour while he ran around a park with all of his original problems plus a bullet wound. For that matter his two swords were found with his corpse, so your claim that he might have dropped his swords is yet more fantasising on your part.
It takes her 5 years to reach this conclusion. The veteran cop on the scene decided to substitute his experience and judgement for "policy", as frankly I'd want anyone to do in an emergency situation which policy hasn't envisioned. And they didn't have 5 years to think about it.
I'd maybe want Harry Callaghan or Martin Riggs to take the law into their own hands, but they're fictional characters for whom doing so always works out in the end. I do not want every Victorian cop given a license to kill every time their "experience and judgement" says "screw the rulebook, I'm going to shoot this guy".
Since this incident did not work out well in terms of public safety at all I'd be happy to cite it as a reason why police should not have this discretion, and should have their actions thoroughly scrutinised whenever they break with policy and kill someone.
Do us all a favour and read all the links and posts you've been provided with before you respond.