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This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fired
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Makes me sick!!!!!! And they wonder why we hate them
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
I have very little use for 99% of the "services" cops provide.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Whilst I agree the cop sounded like a total tosser on the video I'm not sure exactly what else he could have done.
I mean he ran a red light and then didn't stop for a police car. A policeman isn't psychic and his duty is to stop those who go through a red light, especially as it was in the early hours of the morning.
He clearly had to follow the car to the hospital and talk to the driver, that is his job.
And even when somebody says 'my mum is dying' what is a cop supposed to do. If you get stopped for speeding or jumping a light and a cop pulls you over you and you say 'Look someone I care about is dying' do you expect them to instantly say 'No problem go go!' and let them dash off straight away?
Maybe some cops might but others might need more convincing. Look at it another way, if a couple smuggling drugs or wanted for a criminal offence, or maybe had an abducted child in the back was stopped and they said 'Look my mother is dying' and the cop just let them go without checking for insurance, name etc and then it turned out they were criminals he let get away or they killed someone under the influence the cop would get it in the neck for that too.
It's just a horrible situation where a cop happened to observe a traffic violation and his job meant he had to investigate although in this instance the running of a light was justified.
I definitely think the cop could have handled it better but even then I imagine traffic cops listen to a string of excuses from countless drivers that they stop every single day and so are hardened to any kind of emotional pleading.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
They are showing this on CNN right now.They'd have to shoot me,tazz me or gaffle me.What an absolute display of idiocy.I think its a case of stereo typing and predjudice...hope that dick head can live with himself!!He was in no threat and the cop should have put his humanity and situational judgment ahead of the badge and bureaucracy.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicoli surfs 'Nawlins
They are showing this on CNN right now.They'd have to shoot me,tazz me or gaffle me.What an absolute display of idiocy.I think its a case of stereo typing and predjudice...hope that dick head can live with himself!!He was in no threat and the cop should have put his humanity and situational judgment ahead of the badge and bureaucracy.
He definitely deserves criticism for his manner but what else do you think he shouldn't have done?
I mean he had to follow the car and talk to the driver right, that's his job, there's no way he can know they are jumping a light to get to a dying woman on time.
And once there he still had to get the insurance details from the driver, again that's his job.
He shouldn't have given them a ticket or talk to them the way he did but even giving them a ticket was just his job.
It's easy to say he should just exercise his own judgement but what if his judgement was wrong? What if they had stolen the car and then after getting flashed for jumping a light they decide to head for the hospital and claim someone is dying hoping the cop will let them go without checking any for any insurance, ID etc. I guarantee if there was an extreme the other way where a man abducted a child and ran a light, was flashed by police and so drove to a hospital and said 'The girls mum is dying' to the cop and so he just let him go without asking for ID, insurance or anything and then a week later or so it came to light that a man was caught on CCTV getting in that car with an missing child and it came to light that a cop had caught them running a light but had let them go without even checking for ID and insurance that that would make the news too.
At the end of the day police, soldiers, firemen etc all have incredibly difficult jobs and have to follow out their duties according to the law.
I think it's a horrible situation all around, clearly distressing for the family but also for the cop and his family. He might be a very good cop who had had a bad day, has listened to hundreds maybe thousands of excuses in his job as a traffic cop and so jst plays straight by the rules.
What's ironic as well as that already without knowing anything about the cop or his background people are already wanting to jump on him, get him fired and probably tarred and feathered yet they cannot see that maybe the cop who deals with a 101 excuses a day for running a red light might also jump to conclusions or just stick to the letter of the law as a guidline to avoid trouble etc.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Nah...Sorry Bilbo but this guy made the situation about himself and his authority,looked to assert himself with provocation 'do we have a problem'.....when it was clear,YES officer the problem is that my mother is dying while I answer your questions.... he had little control from the get go as the women ran for the door....and he was not about to let it happen twice.
Some times in a position of authority,you have to adapt and improvise as situations unfold minute to minute.He seemed to lack the ability to think/decide past the by the book strict rulebook mentality 101.The family violated a traffic signal and he detained the occupants and vehicle without incident.He had everything in front of him,license plate,vin # and drivers license,registration to fulfill his paperwork obligations while still addressing the unique situation.He had already called for backup and I personally can see a case in him 'escorting' the distraught family member to verify his information with hospital staff.
Down here,they do not even stop you at times should you run a red light.They have traffic cameras that automatically snap a pic of your plate when you run a red.They look up your info at the presinct....run you for violations.....and actually send a ticket in the mail.No interaction with officers what so ever.
Laws need to be up held.No doubt.But common sense and logic are essential,especially in times like that.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicoli surfs 'Nawlins
Nah...Sorry Bilbo but this guy made the situation about himself and his authority,looked to assert himself with provocation 'do we have a problem'.....when it was clear,YES officer the problem is that my mother is dying while I answer your questions.... he had little control from the get go as the women ran for the door....and he was not about to let it happen twice.
Some times in a position of authority,you have to adapt and improvise as situations unfold minute to minute.He seemed to lack the ability to think/decide past the by the book strict rulebook mentality 101.The family violated a traffic signal and he detained the occupants and vehicle without incident.He had everything in front of him,license plate,vin # and drivers license,registration to fulfill his paperwork obligations while still addressing the unique situation.He had already called for backup and I personally can see a case in him 'escorting' the distraught family member to verify his information with hospital staff.
Down here,they do not even stop you at times should you run a red light.They have traffic cameras that automatically snap a pic of your plate when you run a red.They look up your info at the presinct....run you for violations.....and actually send a ticket in the mail.No interaction with officers what so ever.
Laws need to be up held.No doubt.But common sense and logic are essential,especially in times like that.
I agree the officer sounded like a complete knob jockey and shouldn't have given a ticket but eveything else he pretty much had to do.
In this country if you jump a light in front of a cop car they will flash you and pull you over. They will definitely follow you and want words if you just carry on driving and don't stop for them.
Then they would need to see ID and insurance from you to back up your story. That's what I'm saying.
He HAD to stop them and talk to them and he HAD to ask for their details else he wouldn't have been doing his job.
The issue is more about his tone imo than the actual detaining.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
I understand having a hard thankless job, but I've had so many bad experiences with cops I rarely give them the benefit of the doubt. Not saying thats right its just me. As a teenager growing up I had a lot of interaction with law enforcement. My hometown is a college town with a big upper middle class and not much crime. Consequently cops have little to do but harass high school and college kids. I got so many BS tickets and harassment it was absurd. That being said the county deputies who work for an elected official were always pretty reasonable. I think you'd see a change in the attitudes of police forces if their respective Chiefs were elected officials and not appointed.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicoli surfs 'Nawlins
Nah...Sorry Bilbo but this guy made the situation about himself and his authority,looked to assert himself with provocation 'do we have a problem'.....when it was clear,YES officer the problem is that my mother is dying while I answer your questions.... he had little control from the get go as the women ran for the door....and he was not about to let it happen twice.
Some times in a position of authority,you have to adapt and improvise as situations unfold minute to minute.He seemed to lack the ability to think/decide past the by the book strict rulebook mentality 101.The family violated a traffic signal and he detained the occupants and vehicle without incident.He had everything in front of him,license plate,vin # and drivers license,registration to fulfill his paperwork obligations while still addressing the unique situation.He had already called for backup and I personally can see a case in him 'escorting' the distraught family member to verify his information with hospital staff.
Down here,they do not even stop you at times should you run a red light.They have traffic cameras that automatically snap a pic of your plate when you run a red.They look up your info at the presinct....run you for violations.....and actually send a ticket in the mail.No interaction with officers what so ever.
Laws need to be up held.No doubt.But common sense and logic are essential,especially in times like that.
I agree the officer sounded like a complete knob jockey and shouldn't have given a ticket but eveything else he pretty much had to do.
In this country if you jump a light in front of a cop car they will flash you and pull you over. They will definitely follow you and want words if you just carry on driving and don't stop for them.
Then they would need to see ID and insurance from you to back up your story. That's what I'm saying.
He HAD to stop them and talk to them and he HAD to ask for their details else he wouldn't have been doing his job.
The issue is more about his tone imo than the actual detaining.
I cannot really fault him for the ticket or the stoppage,you are correct.Its his conduct after he is aware of the situation...and the man handing his information,identity over.He had everything he needed but was reacting to the sons understandable elevated state.Backup on the way,car secured and a very unique situation.Accompany the son inside or tell him to go in while officer does the paperwork,write the ticket.But to sit there and draw it out like it was his first day of training?Definatly called for tact.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicoli surfs 'Nawlins
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicoli surfs 'Nawlins
Nah...Sorry Bilbo but this guy made the situation about himself and his authority,looked to assert himself with provocation 'do we have a problem'.....when it was clear,YES officer the problem is that my mother is dying while I answer your questions.... he had little control from the get go as the women ran for the door....and he was not about to let it happen twice.
Some times in a position of authority,you have to adapt and improvise as situations unfold minute to minute.He seemed to lack the ability to think/decide past the by the book strict rulebook mentality 101.The family violated a traffic signal and he detained the occupants and vehicle without incident.He had everything in front of him,license plate,vin # and drivers license,registration to fulfill his paperwork obligations while still addressing the unique situation.He had already called for backup and I personally can see a case in him 'escorting' the distraught family member to verify his information with hospital staff.
Down here,they do not even stop you at times should you run a red light.They have traffic cameras that automatically snap a pic of your plate when you run a red.They look up your info at the presinct....run you for violations.....and actually send a ticket in the mail.No interaction with officers what so ever.
Laws need to be up held.No doubt.But common sense and logic are essential,especially in times like that.
I agree the officer sounded like a complete knob jockey and shouldn't have given a ticket but eveything else he pretty much had to do.
In this country if you jump a light in front of a cop car they will flash you and pull you over. They will definitely follow you and want words if you just carry on driving and don't stop for them.
Then they would need to see ID and insurance from you to back up your story. That's what I'm saying.
He HAD to stop them and talk to them and he HAD to ask for their details else he wouldn't have been doing his job.
The issue is more about his tone imo than the actual detaining.
I cannot really fault him for the ticket or the stoppage,you are correct.Its his conduct after he is aware of the situation...and the man handing his information,identity over.He had everything he needed but was reacting to the sons understandable elevated state.Backup on the way,car secured and a very unique situation.Accompany the son inside or tell him to go in while officer does the paperwork,write the ticket.But to sit there and draw it out like it was his first day of training?Definatly called for tact.
Yeah I agree completely with you then. He definitely sounded like a complete jackass.
I thought everyone was jumping on him for stopping the driver and making him produce his insurance and ID, I mean that's just his job he'd be derelict in his duty if he didn't do that.
If I can be so bold as to defend the cop a little bit though I imagine they hear all manner of excuses for people jumping lights, speeding, not stopping when being flashed etc and I'm sure 'My mum is dying' is not the first time its been said and that it hasn't always been the case before.
I mean most people on here and in America it seems have now already decided this cop is an asshole and a disgrace after seeing just under 2 mins of his life with no prior knowledge.
If that cop stops 50 people a day and 30 of them tell him bullshit lies and made up excuses you can understand that maybe when someone tell hims the truth he doesn't automatically know.
I mean consider this scenario. You have just stolen a car and then a cop sees you jump some lights. You know if he stops and ID's you he's going to find out you arn't the owner of the car and have no insurance and stuff to produce and your not crazy enough to try a 120 mph getaway through the streets. What else could you do to maybe get away with it?
Well if there's a hospital nearby you could dash for there and park right by the emergency ward and then when the cop gets out scream at him ' My mum is dying its an emergency she has only minutes to live!'
He might just say 'ok no worries you get in there quick son God bless you and your family' and the car thieves get clean away and the cop gets reprimanded for failing to do his duty.
So it is a fine line. Obviously it looks outrageous on the outside because we have the benefit of full knowledge, the cop didn't.
And now people are saying this cop should be fired again based on only one pretty biased news clip. If you knew the whole situation he might be a great cop. He may have 10 years service and be known as one of the best cops on the beat. He may even have been a hero in other circumstances. I'm not saying he was of course just pointing out that we simply don't know and are basing our opinion on just one tiny 2 min clip of footage of him.
In a way the media and the public are guilty of the same stereotyping jumping to a conclusion that the cop is.
It's kind of inconsistent to say the cop should have properly assessed the situation and dealth with it using his own initiative and then leap to the conclusion that he should be fired and reviled, it's the same sterotyping that we are accusing the cop of who may well have thought this guy was spinning him a line like hundreds have before him.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
I agree with most of what Bilbo has said I don't see what else this copper could have done just cause you scream "My Moms dying" doesn't get you a free pass can you imagine the shit police gets told everyday
I have had a few run ins with the police and spent a few nights in their company some are cocks some are good blokes but in all cases if I would had handled the situation better I probably would have go away sooner
I cant believe the guy got his ticket taken away he still ran a red light
looks like the police are wanting to avoid a race issue and are hanging there man out to dry as I cant see what he did wrong
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
I think the simple fact that the chief of police thinks his behaviour was completely inappropriate says it all. Yes he could stop him, but just give them the ticket & let it go when you can see people are that distressed. Pulling his gun was completely unneccesary. His initial pull-over, fine that's understandable, but the rest of it is bullshit. Also if the people involved feel it may be a race issue, then it may very well be, its very easy to say no its not sitting at a computer when you weren't there, its much easier to tell when you are actually face to face and dealing with them. I'm not saying it is, because I too am sat at a computer, but I think to dismiss it entirely is completely naive. It's police officers like that who fuck it up for the ones who are actually decent human beings.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
I heard about this and all I can say is, I'm white and I've never had a cop do any favors for me.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
I think the simple fact that the chief of police thinks his behaviour was completely inappropriate says it all. Yes he could stop him, but just give them the ticket & let it go when you can see people are that distressed. Pulling his gun was completely unneccesary. His initial pull-over, fine that's understandable, but the rest of it is bullshit. Also if the people involved feel it may be a race issue, then it may very well be, its very easy to say no its not sitting at a computer when you weren't there, its much easier to tell when you are actually face to face and dealing with them. I'm not saying it is, because I too am sat at a computer, but I think to dismiss it entirely is completely naive. It's police officers like that who fuck it up for the ones who are actually decent human beings.
I do agree a lot with what Sonny says about race being an issue for the police here. I imagine with the victim being black no way they would want to get into a racial dispute so easier to just condemn the cop.
I do find the whole thing extrememly biased in terms of reporting though.
I mean there were two offences here, firstly the guy jumped a red light in front of a cop and secondly he didn't stop for the police car when they tried to pull him over.
One thing I've learned from watching police camera action is that when somebody jumps a light and then doesn't pull over for the police there is often a very high percentage chance that the driver is up to no good, either drunk, stolen car, smuggling drugs, stolen goods etc.
Everybody jumping on the cop is looking at it with the benefit of hindsight, i.e this was a genuine case of a poor family who had a mother dying and were racing to get to the hospital. However even then its still no excuse to jump a red light I mean that's just dangerous, if everyone decided they could jump a red light when the situation was urgent enough then we'd have chaos on the roads and its the policeman's job to uphold the law on the roads if he's on traffic duty.
And as I said in the post above anyone can scream 'My mother is dying' and attempt to run into a hospital to avoid being investigated by the police or having to hand over details.
I'm sure this cop, and countless other cops hear these excuses all the time and most of the time they are just blaggers trying anything to get out of a ticket.
I think it was a very unfortunate situation but that the cop is just as big a victim in this as he was just out doing his job and is now part of some huge national scandal and has had his name and reputation dragged through the mud.
What's even more ironic is that you'd get the impression from the media reports that this whole family was detained for hours or something whilst the poor mother in law died alone with nobody with her.
When in fact all the family apart from the driver went straight into the hospital to be with the mother and the driver himself was detained for 1 min 54 seconds!
I really don't see the big deal, to me the cop is actually more of a victim here being made a pariah for just following his job description.
Spicoli you say he should have put his own judgment above beurocracry and rules but at the end of the day all of our servicemen HAVE to follow the rules to the letter. I don't want my police service, fire department, armed forces etc choosing when and when not to follow their job description, that just opens the way to chaos and more problems down the road.
In the interests of public safety I want the police to properly investigate every possible case of foul play.
The guy jumped the lights and refused to stop for a police car. He HAS to stopped and investigated and its aboslutely right he should have to produce his documents. Regarding the ticket the police officer is just following the law in issuing it, its up to others higher than him to waive it imo.
I can't fault the officer for anything other than his tone, which I agree was nasty and unfeeling. However do you really think the cop knew this woman was actually dying in that exact moment? As Sonny said anybody could cry that and many probably do, if the police response was to automatically just let them off and tell them to get in there and see their loved one then the police would just be a laughing stock with people claiming all kinds of excuses to stop the police investigating them.
The more I think about the more I think the real victim is the cop and his family. He was just unfortunate to be on duty in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
The cop should be fired. If he thought they were dangerous criminals why did he let the three others run into the hospital. He didnt call for backup? He knew Ryan was telling the truth and chose to be an ass.
He should have took his license and walked with him into the hospital and once he verified with a nurse let him go.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicoli surfs 'Nawlins
They are showing this on CNN right now.They'd have to shoot me,tazz me or gaffle me.What an absolute display of idiocy.I think its a case of stereo typing and predjudice...hope that dick head can live with himself!!He was in no threat and the cop should have put his humanity and situational judgment ahead of the badge and bureaucracy.
They are taught what to think and how to react.
Uniformed cops take the cake through lack of thought.
Here last month they shot and killed a young man of 15 who was upset over his dads death and had a knife and wouldnt put it down.
Fuckwits didnt think to shoot him in the legs did they? No our targets dont have legs .Thats how dumb and brainwashed they become.
Then you get one of them on the camera reading out the offical statment in monotone.
You can be knocked back from the uniformed job by having a too high IQ you know, they steer you away from it.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Whilst I agree the cop sounded like a total tosser on the video I'm not sure exactly what else he could have done.
I mean he ran a red light and then didn't stop for a police car. A policeman isn't psychic and his duty is to stop those who go through a red light, especially as it was in the early hours of the morning.
He clearly had to follow the car to the hospital and talk to the driver, that is his job.
And even when somebody says 'my mum is dying' what is a cop supposed to do. If you get stopped for speeding or jumping a light and a cop pulls you over you and you say 'Look someone I care about is dying' do you expect them to instantly say 'No problem go go!' and let them dash off straight away?
Maybe some cops might but others might need more convincing. Look at it another way, if a couple smuggling drugs or wanted for a criminal offence, or maybe had an abducted child in the back was stopped and they said 'Look my mother is dying' and the cop just let them go without checking for insurance, name etc and then it turned out they were criminals he let get away or they killed someone under the influence the cop would get it in the neck for that too.
It's just a horrible situation where a cop happened to observe a traffic violation and his job meant he had to investigate although in this instance the running of a light was justified.
I definitely think the cop could have handled it better but even then I imagine traffic cops listen to a string of excuses from countless drivers that they stop every single day and so are hardened to any kind of emotional pleading.
If you can detain him in the parking lot that long,you can follow him up to the hospital room and detain him there,he was just saying "Respect mah athoritah"
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Hunter
The cop should be fired. If he thought they were dangerous criminals why did he let the three others run into the hospital. He didnt call for backup? He knew Ryan was telling the truth and chose to be an ass.
He should have took his license and walked with him into the hospital and once he verified with a nurse let him go.
He did call for backup and he didn't let the others run into the hospital they just ran in when he told them to stay where they were, did you even watch the video?
The cop didn't know they were telling the truth, all he had to go by was a driver jumped a red light in plain view of the police then refused to stop when flashed to pull over.
I'm sorry but in that situation if you are a cop your immediate reaction is that this is a potential hostile situation with an uncooperative lawbreaking driver who may be dangerous.
Just driving to the hospital and then leaping out of the car yelling someone is dying and trying to run off doesn't mean the cop can just believe everything you say.
How can you in all seriousness based on one single news report claim definiteively that you enough information and judgement to be able to sack a man you have never met and do not know anything about?
How is that consistent. You are doing EXACTLY the same as what the cop did.
The cop saw a guy run a light, he saw a car blatently refuse to pull over for him and continue driving and so he assumed the driver was a hostile, uncooperative and potentially dangerous risk.
He jumped to a conclusion based on the evidence he had at that time EXACTLY the way you are doing now.
Can you not see the hyprocrisy in this?
How can say the police offer should have used his judegment in that moment and tried to see things from a different perspective when you are incapable of the same thing?
And remember this whole 'detaining' incident took less than 2 minutes!
The cop was doing his job, he had no way of knowing when he confronted them that their mother was dying and even after they told him he had no way of knowing that that was true.
He reacted in the moment according to the information he had and got it wrong. Yes he could have handled it better but he's only human and didn't have the information we now have at that time.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Hunter
The cop should be fired. If he thought they were dangerous criminals why did he let the three others run into the hospital. He didnt call for backup? He knew Ryan was telling the truth and chose to be an ass.
He should have took his license and walked with him into the hospital and once he verified with a nurse let him go.
He did call for backup and he didn't let the others run into the hospital they just ran in when he told them to stay where they were, did you even watch the video?
The cop didn't know they were telling the truth, all he had to go by was a driver jumped a red light in plain view of the police then refused to stop when flashed to pull over.
I'm sorry but in that situation if you are a cop your immediate reaction is that this is a potential hostile situation with an uncooperative lawbreaking driver who may be dangerous.
Just driving to the hospital and then leaping out of the car yelling someone is dying and trying to run off doesn't mean the cop can just believe everything you say.
How can you in all seriousness based on one single news report claim definiteively that you enough information and judgement to be able to sack a man you have never met and do not know anything about?
How is that consistent. You are doing EXACTLY the same as what the cop did.
The cop saw a guy run a light, he saw a car blatently refuse to pull over for him and continue driving and so he assumed the driver was a hostile, uncooperative and potentially dangerous risk.
He jumped to a conclusion based on the evidence he had at that time EXACTLY the way you are doing now.
Can you not see the hyprocrisy in this?
How can say the police offer should have used his judegment in that moment and tried to see things from a different perspective when you are incapable of the same thing?
And remember this whole 'detaining' incident took less than 2 minutes!
The cop was doing his job, he had no way of knowing when he confronted them that their mother was dying and even after they told him he had no way of knowing that that was true.
He reacted in the moment according to the information he had and got it wrong. Yes he could have handled it better but he's only human and didn't have the information we now have at that time.
The backup asked for Moats to be let go
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
I've just read in an article that he actually detained him for 13 minutes, if that's the case then its clearly out of order, the video I watched of the incident lasted only 1 minute and 54 seconds, maybe that was edited?
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Hunter
The cop should be fired. If he thought they were dangerous criminals why did he let the three others run into the hospital. He didnt call for backup? He knew Ryan was telling the truth and chose to be an ass.
He should have took his license and walked with him into the hospital and once he verified with a nurse let him go.
He did call for backup and he didn't let the others run into the hospital they just ran in when he told them to stay where they were, did you even watch the video?
The cop didn't know they were telling the truth, all he had to go by was a driver jumped a red light in plain view of the police then refused to stop when flashed to pull over.
I'm sorry but in that situation if you are a cop your immediate reaction is that this is a potential hostile situation with an uncooperative lawbreaking driver who may be dangerous.
Just driving to the hospital and then leaping out of the car yelling someone is dying and trying to run off doesn't mean the cop can just believe everything you say.
How can you in all seriousness based on one single news report claim definiteively that you enough information and judgement to be able to sack a man you have never met and do not know anything about?
How is that consistent. You are doing EXACTLY the same as what the cop did.
The cop saw a guy run a light, he saw a car blatently refuse to pull over for him and continue driving and so he assumed the driver was a hostile, uncooperative and potentially dangerous risk.
He jumped to a conclusion based on the evidence he had at that time EXACTLY the way you are doing now.
Can you not see the hyprocrisy in this?
How can say the police offer should have used his judegment in that moment and tried to see things from a different perspective when you are incapable of the same thing?
And remember this whole 'detaining' incident took less than 2 minutes!
The cop was doing his job, he had no way of knowing when he confronted them that their mother was dying and even after they told him he had no way of knowing that that was true.
He reacted in the moment according to the information he had and got it wrong. Yes he could have handled it better but he's only human and didn't have the information we now have at that time.
I did watch the video, have you ever seen how officers react when they are making a felony stop? If he seriously thought Moats was fleeing and they were criminals he would have held them at gun point and put moats in handcuffs right away.
Either he thought they were dangerous criminals or he didnt, if he didnt (which is obvious) he should have let them go based on the circumstances.
The cop is an incompetent moron and should be canned.
You need to obtain all the facts.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
I've just read in an article that he actually detained him for 13 minutes, if that's the case then its clearly out of order, the video I watched of the incident lasted only 1 minute and 54 seconds, maybe that was edited?
You are asking me if I watched the video and it is apparent you havent:rolleyes:. The moron detained Moats for 15 minutes. Two nurses and a Plano cop all talked to the "cop" and he still wouldnt let him go. The first nurse talked to the cop after 6 minutes and confirmed his mother in law was dying and he kept Moats another 9 minutes.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Hunter
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
I've just read in an article that he actually detained him for 13 minutes, if that's the case then its clearly out of order, the video I watched of the incident lasted only 1 minute and 54 seconds, maybe that was edited?
You are asking me if I watched the video and it is apparent you havent:rolleyes:. The moron detained Moats for 15 minutes. Two nurses and a Plano cop all talked to the "cop" and he still wouldnt let him go. The first nurse talked to the cop after 6 minutes and confirmed his mother in law was dying and he kept Moats another 9 minutes.
I watched the video link that was provided that lasted only 2 minutes. The drawing of the gun, the nurse coming out and the long delay wern't in that video that I saw.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Think of how many real criminals got away because Johnny Law was detaining an NFL Running Back while his mother in law was dying for running a red light.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Wait it gets better,the light was stuck on red because of a power outage
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Spicoli surfs 'Nawlins
They are showing this on CNN right now.They'd have to shoot me,tazz me or gaffle me.What an absolute display of idiocy.I think its a case of stereo typing and predjudice...hope that dick head can live with himself!!He was in no threat and the cop should have put his humanity and situational judgment ahead of the badge and bureaucracy.
They are taught what to think and how to react.
Uniformed cops take the cake through lack of thought.
Here last month they shot and killed a young man of 15 who was upset over his dads death and had a knife and wouldnt put it down.
Fuckwits didnt think to shoot him in the legs did they? No our targets dont have legs .Thats how dumb and brainwashed they become.
Then you get one of them on the camera reading out the offical statment in monotone.
You can be knocked back from the uniformed job by having a too high IQ you know, they steer you away from it.
The reason they don't shoot in the legs is because there are trained to aim for the largest body mass, the torso to reduce the chance off missing and killing someone with a ricochet
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tilt A Whirl
Wait it gets better,the light was stuck on red because of a power outage
Bollocks, If there was a power outage the light would be off not stuck on red
Quote:
Think of how many real criminals got away because Johnny Law was detaining an NFL Running Back while his mother in law was dying for running a red light.
If someone runs a red light in front of a copper how does he know he is not a criminal? he finds out by pulling him over
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sonny78
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tilt A Whirl
Wait it gets better,the light was stuck on red because of a power outage
Bollocks, If there was a power outage the light would be off not stuck on red
Quote:
Think of how many real criminals got away because Johnny Law was detaining an NFL Running Back while his mother in law was dying for running a red light.
If someone runs a red light in front of a copper how does he know he is not a criminal? he finds out by pulling him over
No,if there's an outage,it resets to a blinking red,the law is,you treat it like a stop sign,which is what he did
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Just out of interest does anyone else feel this only became national news because of the celebrity status of Moats and the fact that he was black?
If it was an ordinary white Joe Blow this wouldn't even have made the local news.
Let's say this had happened to Lyle or Trainer Monkey. Do you think CCN would have been all over it? Do you think it would even be covered at all?
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Just out of interest does anyone else feel this only became national news because of the celebrity status of Moats and the fact that he was black?
If it was an ordinary white Joe Blow this wouldn't even have made the local news.
Let's say this had happened to Lyle or Trainer Monkey. Do you think CCN would have been all over it? Do you think it would even be covered at all?
Are you claiming that the media played up the issue of race in order to sensationalize a story? I just don't believe it! :p
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Just out of interest does anyone else feel this only became national news because of the celebrity status of Moats and the fact that he was black?
If it was an ordinary white Joe Blow this wouldn't even have made the local news.
Let's say this had happened to Lyle or Trainer Monkey. Do you think CCN would have been all over it? Do you think it would even be covered at all?
I think the celebrity status is what makes the difference, although its the kind of story that could be big anyway as it plays on people's emotions at being denied time with their family before they pass away. I think if it happened to an ordinary white Joe Blow it would make bigger news than if it happened to an ordinary black guy. That's just based on how the media works. I think if it happened to Ryan Moats or Dan Orlovsky the news coverage wouldn't change, simply down to their status as NFL players
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Just out of interest does anyone else feel this only became national news because of the celebrity status of Moats and the fact that he was black?
If it was an ordinary white Joe Blow this wouldn't even have made the local news.
Let's say this had happened to Lyle or Trainer Monkey. Do you think CCN would have been all over it? Do you think it would even be covered at all?
I think the celebrity status is what makes the difference,
although its the kind of story that could be big anyway as it plays on people's emotions at being denied time with their family before they pass away. I think if it happened to an ordinary white Joe Blow it would make bigger news than if it happened to an ordinary black guy. That's just based on how the media works. I think if it happened to Ryan Moats or Dan Orlovsky the news coverage wouldn't change, simply down to their status as NFL players
Seriously? I reckon this kind of thing probably happens all the time only the ordinary guy wouldn't get let off of his ticket after complaining.
I don't believe this would be the first time something like this would have happened, it probably goes on all the time in countries all over the world.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Just out of interest does anyone else feel this only became national news because of the celebrity status of Moats and the fact that he was black?
If it was an ordinary white Joe Blow this wouldn't even have made the local news.
Let's say this had happened to Lyle or Trainer Monkey. Do you think CCN would have been all over it? Do you think it would even be covered at all?
Of course its because he's an NFL running back,"Matchmaker/Trainer gets jacked up by the police" is not exactly national news.
Now if one of my fighters got jacked up,that at least might make the local news. But even though Ive got some juice in the sport of boxing,me getting jacked up by the po po's isnt even making the newspaper byline
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tilt A Whirl
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Just out of interest does anyone else feel this only became national news because of the celebrity status of Moats and the fact that he was black?
If it was an ordinary white Joe Blow this wouldn't even have made the local news.
Let's say this had happened to Lyle or Trainer Monkey. Do you think CCN would have been all over it? Do you think it would even be covered at all?
Of course its because he's an NFL running back,"Matchmaker/Trainer gets jacked up by the police" is not exactly national news.
Now if one of my fighters got jacked up,that at least might make the local news. But even though Ive got some juice in the sport of boxing,me getting jacked up by the po po's isnt even making the newspaper byline
haha thanks for making me laugh again Monkey in thinking the papers would describe you as a matchmaker/trainer. Do you think they would also say former punk star and caving expert as well?
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Just out of interest does anyone else feel this only became national news because of the celebrity status of Moats and the fact that he was black?
If it was an ordinary white Joe Blow this wouldn't even have made the local news.
Let's say this had happened to Lyle or Trainer Monkey. Do you think CCN would have been all over it? Do you think it would even be covered at all?
I think the celebrity status is what makes the difference,
although its the kind of story that could be big anyway as it plays on people's emotions at being denied time with their family before they pass away. I think if it happened to an ordinary white Joe Blow it would make bigger news than if it happened to an ordinary black guy. That's just based on how the media works. I think if it happened to Ryan Moats or Dan Orlovsky the news coverage wouldn't change, simply down to their status as NFL players
Seriously? I reckon this kind of thing probably happens all the time only the ordinary guy wouldn't get let off of his ticket after complaining.
I don't believe this would be the first time something like this would have happened, it probably goes on all the time in countries all over the world.
If the 'victim' was smart enough to go to the papers it could become a good story. It would at least get a day or two of media coverage, just depends whether it snowballs or not. I agree it probably does go on, but the fact it happened to a famous football player meant it was more high-profile. Also the race thing is actually unimportant. You're right if it happened to Lyle it wouldn't register, but equally if it happened to me it would DEFINITELY not register, even in spite of the facts I have contacts in the media. In the words of Chris Rock, "this shit ain't about race, it's about fame".
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
I think the celebrity status is what makes the difference, although its the kind of story that could be big anyway as it plays on people's emotions at being denied time with their family before they pass away. I think if it happened to an ordinary white Joe Blow it would make bigger news than if it happened to an ordinary black guy. That's just based on how the media works. I think if it happened to Ryan Moats or Dan Orlovsky the news coverage wouldn't change, simply down to their status as NFL players
Seriously? I reckon this kind of thing probably happens all the time only the ordinary guy wouldn't get let off of his ticket after complaining.
I don't believe this would be the first time something like this would have happened, it probably goes on all the time in countries all over the world.
If the 'victim' was smart enough to go to the papers it could become a good story. It would at least get a day or two of media coverage, just depends whether it snowballs or not. I agree it probably does go on, but the fact it happened to a famous football player meant it was more high-profile. Also the race thing is actually unimportant. You're right if it happened to Lyle it wouldn't register, but equally if it happened to me it would DEFINITELY not register, even in spite of the facts I have contacts in the media. In the words of Chris Rock, "this shit ain't about race, it's about fame".
Yeah you're probably right, its just if it was a white guy there wouldn't be the assumption that the cop was acting a dick becuase of race. The colour of the participants surely plays a role in the intereperation of a story in the media and amongst the public.
I genuinely believe if this had happened to an ordinary person the police would be defending their officer and challenging the story but becuase it happened to a celeberity and significantly a black celebrity they are hanging their officer out to dry and trying to distance themselves from the shitstorm as much as possible.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Seriously? I reckon this kind of thing probably happens all the time only the ordinary guy wouldn't get let off of his ticket after complaining.
I don't believe this would be the first time something like this would have happened, it probably goes on all the time in countries all over the world.
If the 'victim' was smart enough to go to the papers it could become a good story. It would at least get a day or two of media coverage, just depends whether it snowballs or not. I agree it probably does go on, but the fact it happened to a famous football player meant it was more high-profile. Also the race thing is actually unimportant. You're right if it happened to Lyle it wouldn't register, but equally if it happened to me it would DEFINITELY not register, even in spite of the facts I have contacts in the media. In the words of Chris Rock, "this shit ain't about race, it's about fame".
Yeah you're probably right, its just if it was a white guy there wouldn't be the assumption that the cop was acting a dick becuase of race. The colour of the participants surely plays a role in the intereperation of a story in the media and amongst the public.
I genuinely believe if this had happened to an ordinary person the police would be defending their officer and challenging the story but becuase it happened to a celeberity and significantly a black celebrity they are hanging their officer out to dry and trying to distance themselves from the shitstorm as much as possible.
Nope, its because they're learning how to read the public, and they've realized 90% of the public will think that officer was out of order & scumbag. If the story broke & it was about an average joe, they would do the same. Its all about the reaction of the majority, and most of the views on here represent how most people would feel in general.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Tax payers money at work.
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Re: This is beyond reproach... To serve and protect my ass, this officer should be fi
Moats handled the situation with class during the altercation....Not once did he mention he was an NFL player.......
He was upset but not out of control and still showed respect despite the situation.
I think this would have been in the press regardless of who it was.