Quetzal
New member
According to certain members on this forum, execution from an officer would an appropriate punishment for j-walking.Is fleeing a reason to use deadly force or is that excessive?
According to certain members on this forum, execution from an officer would an appropriate punishment for j-walking.Is fleeing a reason to use deadly force or is that excessive?
According to certain members on this forum, execution from an officer would an appropriate punishment for j-walking.
The psychiatric orderlies I mentioned earlier had a moved they drilled in over and over, because they used it so much and it was so effective. Patient throws a punch at you or approaches while reaching out...1.5 seconds later the orderly is behind them, gripping their wrists crosswise across their stomach, like a straightjacket, with their hip into the small of the patient's back. Then they just lean a little...patient's off the ground and unable to move.
Had this done to me by a guy a full foot shorter than me and...yeah, you're not going anywhere. :chuckle:
You can't hold that for more than a minute or so before it starts to wear on you but that's plenty of time for half a dozen other orderlies to handle the situation.
But still and all, you know that those half dozen orderlies are going to do with you now? Yup, you're going to the ground.
Is fleeing a reason to use deadly force or is that excessive?
According to certain members on this forum, execution from an officer would an appropriate punishment for j-walking.
I don't have one, I was exaggerating to make a silly point.Link?
I don't have one, I was exaggerating to make asillyretarded point.
Though Tiller was cleared of wrongdoing by a state prosecutor, Walker said the video shows that the officer “placed himself in a vulnerable position”
and could have let the fleeing 19-year-old go.
Tiller could have picked up Hammond later, Walker said. The officer saw the suspect, knew what car he was driving and had the license plate number.
Is fleeing a reason to use deadly force or is that excessive?
There is nothing this woman could have said or done to warrant this kind of violent attack.
don't cops do that every time they go out of the station house?
yes, he could have
but do we really want our cops to let fleeing suspects go?
do fleeing suspects usually obey traffic rules?
if a fleeing suspect runs over my six year old kid riding his bike, I'm gonna want him held to account and the cop who let him go
right, because people engaged in criminal activities (like dealing drugs) never engage in other criminal activities (like driving stolen cars)
and they always go straight home after the cops let them go and just wait to be picked up
maybe
dumb kid shouldn't have been dealing drugs :idunno:
Didn't the dumb kid know that drugs carry an instant extrajudicial death sentence?
he shoulda known it was a possibility
It is in North Korea and Saudi Arabia. Why not democracies too?
more to the point - what do you think the cop should have done?
tased her?
pepper sprayed her?
punched her in the face and knocked her out?
took out a billyclub and clubbed her unconscious?
asked her to pretty please stop kicking him?
cry like a little girl?
The woman was drunk. If she had been sexually assaulted instead of physically assaulted by a cop, would she still have "deserved it" for disrespecting authority?