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Looting in Missouri after cops shoot 18 year old (2 Viewers)

It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Googles is your friend. There's video of cops rolling up like the first armored division and gunning down a 12 year old.
Google something he had no idea about? What would he search for?

 
Instead of the hands up thing, maybe the demonstrators could use an assaulting motion.
Or struggle with a gun, run, turn around, and walk toward you with hands almost in the air but so you can't tell if they're charging or not.
Which was completely refuted by the witnesses AND autopsy. You're clinging here trying to get your Civil Rights MomentTM.

You'll have to look elsewhere to find your innocent person for the lynch mob to crucify.
Actually, it wasn't. At all. That's what the majority of witnesses testify to, and the autopsy is no way refutes it. But you wouldn't know that because you haven't actually read the things you spout on about.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.
No, but can't we fault the operator for not relaying that important information? I also wonder what their training says about driving up to within feet of a guy suspected to have a gun? Seems like a dumb move especially if it were a real gun and you're still seated.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Googles is your friend. There's video of cops rolling up like the first armored division and gunning down a 12 year old.
Google something he had no idea about? What would he search for?
Those guys that created Google are pretty smart. Probably why they're billionaires and I'm not. But you'd be surprised at how far off the terms I used to find something and ended up stumbling upon it.
 
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It's the prosecutors job to get an indictment? That is stupid. Seriously.
Stupid? It happens 99% of the time.
The prosecutors job is to make sure justice is served, not get indictments.
If the prosecutor believes that justice is not served by getting an indictment, he shouldn't bring the case before a grand jury.
I do agree with this. The prosecutor should have just said publicly that there isn't enough evidence to bring charges and left it at that.

The result here was the correct one, but the means to get there should have been a little different.

 
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It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:

http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Uhh. What? You actually watched the video, right? The cops drove up on the grass and shot him in under two seconds. The video doesn't clearly show the 12 year old kid grab or point the airsoft gun at police. The 911 caller indicated to police that the "gun was probably fake". There are lots of things wrong with that case.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.
No, but can't we fault the operator for not relaying that important information? I also wonder what their training says about driving up to within feet of a guy suspected to have a gun? Seems like a dumb move especially if it were a real gun and you're still seated.
The operator def #### the bed here.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Uhh. What? You actually watched the video, right? The cops drove up on the grass and shot him in under two seconds. The video doesn't clearly show the 12 year old kid grab or point the airsoft gun at police. The 911 caller indicated to police that the "gun was probably fake". There are lots of things wrong with that case.
That info wasn't relayed to the officer. They were under the impression they were approaching a menacing figure who had a firearm. This isn't complicated and not on the cops :shrug: Furthermore, the firing officer wasn't driving. He was in a situation where he felt his life was in jeopardy. He had every right to act as he did there. It is sad, but he can't be faulted by anyone with a brain.

 
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It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.
Not sure about this one. Did you watch the video? Kid sees the car coming and casual walks up to it. Cop jumps out of the car and shoots. They could have at least pulled up on the street and quickly assessed the situation.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.
Not sure about this one. Did you watch the video? Kid sees the car coming and casual walks up to it. Cop jumps out of the car and shoots. They could have at least pulled up on the street and quickly assessed the situation.
Agreed. At best, this situation seems to have been handled incredibly poorly. I'm not involved in law enforcement so I'm not really qualified to say, but I find it hard to believe that driving right up to within feet of what you think is an armed person is the correct protocol for this sort of scenario. In fairness, the guy who did the shooting wasn't the guy who was driving, and he had really good reason for acting in self defense (in his view).

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Googles is your friend. There's video of cops rolling up like the first armored division and gunning down a 12 year old.
That sucks. What does it have to do with this thread though?

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Googles is your friend. There's video of cops rolling up like the first armored division and gunning down a 12 year old.
Google something he had no idea about? What would he search for?
"News events in the US I haven't heard about yet, to avoid any snarky internet comments"

 
You guys realize you are revealing a lot about your positions and your desired outcome when you start saying in the essence "ok fine but what about that other black kid the cops shot???"

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Googles is your friend. There's video of cops rolling up like the first armored division and gunning down a 12 year old.
Google something he had no idea about? What would he search for?
"News events in the US I haven't heard about yet, to avoid any snarky internet comments"
:lmao:

 
You guys realize you are revealing a lot about your positions and your desired outcome when you start saying in the essence "ok fine but what about that other black kid the cops shot???"
Uhm, yes? You realize the protests that are happening aren't just about (and I would personally argue aren't even mostly about) Michael Brown, right?

 
You guys realize you are revealing a lot about your positions and your desired outcome when you start saying in the essence "ok fine but what about that other black kid the cops shot???"
Uhm, yes? You realize the protests that are happening aren't just about (and I would personally argue aren't even mostly about) Michael Brown, right?
Correct! It's also about getting as much loot as you can under the guise of OUTRAGE!

 
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It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.
No, but can't we fault the operator for not relaying that important information? I also wonder what their training says about driving up to within feet of a guy suspected to have a gun? Seems like a dumb move especially if it were a real gun and you're still seated.
Maybe we can get some people to loot and burn down the operator's house.

 
You guys realize you are revealing a lot about your positions and your desired outcome when you start saying in the essence "ok fine but what about that other black kid the cops shot???"
Uhm, yes? You realize the protests that are happening aren't just about (and I would personally argue aren't even mostly about) Michael Brown, right?
Pretty sure most of these protesters dont even know why they are protesting, so I am pretty sure you don't know either.

 
Instead of the hands up thing, maybe the demonstrators could use an assaulting motion.
Or struggle with a gun, run, turn around, and walk toward you with hands almost in the air but so you can't tell if they're charging or not.
Which was completely refuted by the witnesses AND autopsy. You're clinging here trying to get your Civil Rights MomentTM.

You'll have to look elsewhere to find your innocent person for the lynch mob to crucify.
Actually, it wasn't. At all. That's what the majority of witnesses testify to, and the autopsy is no way refutes it. But you wouldn't know that because you haven't actually read the things you spout on about.
Sure it was.

A review of thousands of pages of grand jury documents reveals numerous examples of statements made that were inconsistent or provably wrong
Autopsies ultimately showed Brown wasn't struck by any bullets in his back, despite witness Dorian Johnson claiming he saw it happen

One witness admitted that she suffered from a mental disorder, has racist views and trouble distinguishing the truth from things she had read online

Another said he saw an officer with a gun drawn and Brown 'on his knees with his hands in the air' before later admitting he hadn't seen the shooting
 
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It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.
No, but can't we fault the operator for not relaying that important information?I also wonder what their training says about driving up to within feet of a guy suspected to have a gun? Seems like a dumb move especially if it were a real gun and you're still seated.
Maybe we can get some people to loot and burn down the operator's house.
You have her home address and photo of what the house looks like? Maybe I should see if the NY Times has posted it yet.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Googles is your friend. There's video of cops rolling up like the first armored division and gunning down a 12 year old.
Google something he had no idea about? What would he search for?
A clue?

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
Oops meant Cleveland. I believe the 911 operator should be prosecuted. She left out how the 911 caller mentioned it's probably a toy gun. She never relayed that to the officer. Regardless, why roll up and expose your partner like that? Had they parked and approached more strategically then maybe they wouldn't have had such itchy trigger fingers?
Cops were in a situation where the information relayed to them was a menacing figure with a gun. The functionality of a gun doesn't change when being held by a 12 year old or a 90 year old. I can't fault them for their actions here, and anyone who does loses credibility.
Not sure about this one. Did you watch the video? Kid sees the car coming and casual walks up to it. Cop jumps out of the car and shoots. They could have at least pulled up on the street and quickly assessed the situation.
Agreed. At best, this situation seems to have been handled incredibly poorly. I'm not involved in law enforcement so I'm not really qualified to say, but I find it hard to believe that driving right up to within feet of what you think is an armed person is the correct protocol for this sort of scenario. In fairness, the guy who did the shooting wasn't the guy who was driving, and he had really good reason for acting in self defense (in his view).
LOOKED LIKE A DRIVEBY SHOOTING

 
Instead of the hands up thing, maybe the demonstrators could use an assaulting motion.
Or struggle with a gun, run, turn around, and walk toward you with hands almost in the air but so you can't tell if they're charging or not.
Which was completely refuted by the witnesses AND autopsy. You're clinging here trying to get your Civil Rights MomentTM.

You'll have to look elsewhere to find your innocent person for the lynch mob to crucify.
You should probably read the testimony you're talking about.
 
It's the prosecutors job to get an indictment? That is stupid. Seriously.
Stupid? It happens 99% of the time.
The prosecutors job is to make sure justice is served, not get indictments.
If the prosecutor believes that justice is not served by getting an indictment, he shouldn't bring the case before a grand jury.
I do agree with this. The prosecutor should have just said publicly that there isn't enough evidence to bring charges and left it at that.

The result here was the correct one, but the means to get there should have been a little different.
It perpetuated the view that everything since Brown died has been a sham. And it's pretty easy to believe that grand jury dog and pony show was just that - a dog and pony show.
 
You guys realize you are revealing a lot about your positions and your desired outcome when you start saying in the essence "ok fine but what about that other black kid the cops shot???"
Uhm, yes? You realize the protests that are happening aren't just about (and I would personally argue aren't even mostly about) Michael Brown, right?
I'm guessing >50% of the protestors think Michael Brown was shot in the back while running away.

 
Instead of the hands up thing, maybe the demonstrators could use an assaulting motion.
Or struggle with a gun, run, turn around, and walk toward you with hands almost in the air but so you can't tell if they're charging or not.
Which was completely refuted by the witnesses AND autopsy. You're clinging here trying to get your Civil Rights MomentTM.

You'll have to look elsewhere to find your innocent person for the lynch mob to crucify.
Actually, it wasn't. At all. That's what the majority of witnesses testify to, and the autopsy is no way refutes it. But you wouldn't know that because you haven't actually read the things you spout on about.
Sure it was.

A review of thousands of pages of grand jury documents reveals numerous examples of statements made that were inconsistent or provably wrong
Autopsies ultimately showed Brown wasn't struck by any bullets in his back, despite witness Dorian Johnson claiming he saw it happen

One witness admitted that she suffered from a mental disorder, has racist views and trouble distinguishing the truth from things she had read online

Another said he saw an officer with a gun drawn and Brown 'on his knees with his hands in the air' before later admitting he hadn't seen the shooting
Way to pull a quote from a news article, I'm super proud of you. If you'd read the actual testimony, you'd know that the picture is not at all clear. Dorian indicated he thought Brown was shot in the back because he saw Brown make a "jerking" motion while he was running away. At least one other witness unrelated to Brown or Johnson (and not discredited) indicated he also though Brown was shot while running because of a jerking motion he made while running away. That motion could easily have been in response to his already sustained injuries and the shock wearing off. Accounts differ on how many shots were fired and when they were fired because, obviously, memory is imperfect. I wouldn't at all be surprised that Dorian's memory thought shots were fired while Brown was running. He states in his testimony that after the shots were fired in the car, he was busy getting out of there. With all of the commotion, he's not the only one that incorrectly remembers exactly how many and when shots were fired (and that applies to all witnesses, including those supporting Wilson's story).

The witness who suffered from a mental disorder and was discredited was the one that most supported Officer Wilson's story.

There were about 3-4 out of 30+ witnesses (that I've personally read) that were discredited as providing accounts they had heard, rather than seen. Similar to the crazy racist lady above. The one you mention in particular is, I believe, the friend of Brown's that saw Brown in an altercation at the car, but was in the stairwell of the apartments going outside when the chase and shooting happened. Makes sense that a personal friend of the dead that wasn't immediately involved in the event wouldn't be a reliable witness.

The vast majority of those interviewed didn't see the entire event and have iffy recollection of specific sounds because there was lots of commotion (multiple people described the area as "noisy" on a normal day). However, the most common description of what happened after the altercation of the car was that Brown ran past about two parked cars, turned back, and began to move (specifically not run) back toward the officer. Only a couple of people described Brown as "charging" (that number includes crazy racist lady who wasn't there). Several describe Brown as hunched over slightly forward as if in pain or in a protective stance, and most describe at least one of his arms moving up toward shoulder level in a defensive manner. Most of the people who indicated Brown ran toward Wilson were far enough away that it is entirely plausible that, in the commotion of the scene, they saw Brown hunched over and moving/staggering toward the officer with his arms raised out in front of him ("like a football player") and interpreted this as an aggressive charge. It's also entirely possible that the people who say he was in a defensive posture misinterpreted Brown's aggressive movement. But one would think that if that were the case most of the accounts of the people who were clearly established as being at the scene and being random bystanders would indicate he was running, which they don't.

 
You guys realize you are revealing a lot about your positions and your desired outcome when you start saying in the essence "ok fine but what about that other black kid the cops shot???"
Uhm, yes? You realize the protests that are happening aren't just about (and I would personally argue aren't even mostly about) Michael Brown, right?
I'm guessing >50% of the protestors think Michael Brown was shot in the back while running away.
I wouldn't necessarily disagree with that. As evidenced by this thread, most people haven't bothered to read the actual evidence. But the rage being expressed is not at all borne from a single incident.

 
He simply wanted Wilson to walk. Just that simple.
He knew there was zero chance of a conviction and that the facts led toward a justified shooting. So instead of making a unilateral decision (which in a normal world he could have and it would have been fine) he turned it over to the grand jury and had them go through everything. At least then the grand jury, who acts as the community, can have a say in what happens. I don't see how he can be faulted for anything he did here.
You can't be serious. It's the prosecutors job to get an indictment. The DA did everything that he could to exonerate Wilson. There's a reason why he's 0-5 when getting an indictment on a cop. Dig deeper.
You are absolutely wrong. A prosecutor has an ethical duty not to bring charges if there is insufficient evidence, or in this case if a shooting was justified. News Flash: It was. He surely had the opinion that it would be an injustice to charge, and put an innocent man on a show trial with his life in the balance. And so he took a laudable and responsible tack (something many of the protestors seem incapable of even fathoming) and let a Grand Jury evaluate. The truth here is that there are victims in this case, and none of them are Michael Brown. In fact, the victims are victims of Michael Brown's actions (and some by his step father). The Indian store owner who was robbed and has had his store looted twice = victim. Darren Wilson who had a tough job having to brave the ilk of the thugs we've seen in their full glory and acted reasonably to protect his life against a 300 pound giant grabbing for his gun after hitting him = victim. We'll come a lot further in this country when we can call out reprehensible behavior and assign some accountability. It really is that simple.
 
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It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:

http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
I don't know all the facts save for the video and article...but my first impression is that there is something terribly wrong with the way these officers conducted themselves that day. Why the hell are you rolling up recklessly and so aggressively in a squad car towards a person who may have a gun according to 9-1-1 calls? I am not a police tactics expert...but I have some experience in this arena and I am pretty positive that this was a violation of training and protocols.

Sure, the cop might be able to say that the suspect pulled the gun and thus he had to shoot. That is because they gave themselves no time to assess and deal with the situation appropriately. Absolutely heart breaking to watch this kid just being a little boy walking around aimlessly, kind of bored, throwing snow around, kicking snow and then just see him get gunned down like that.

This is the sort of case that we should be having a national dialogue about. This is the dead citizen that literally could be any of our kids. What if the 9-1-1 call was wrong and the kid didn't have a gun, but was carrying something that looked like a gun. Maybe he made something at home or whatever. Well...the cop was firing as soon as the kid made some sort of motion that he felt threatened him in some way.

I don't get it. Just sad. Terribly sad.

ETA: I am not even so sure you can blame the actual officer who shot the kid. He was put in a precarious position by his veteran partner and 9-1-1 operator. So, just want to make clear that my blame is really directed at those two and feel both should lose their jobs. And I do think that the driver should be subject to court proceedings to see if he was criminally liable and civilly liable for wrongful death.

 
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Anybody talk yet about how the prosecutors handed out a document of a Missouri statute that said police officers could lawfully kill a fleeing criminal (regardless of fear for their own life) at the very beginning of Grand Jury proceedings and only revealed to the jurors on Nov 21st (after testimony had been finished) that the statute had, in fact, been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1985 and shouldn't be taken in to account?

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
I don't know all the facts save for the video and article...but my first impression is that there is something terribly wrong with the way these officers conducted themselves that day. Why the hell are you rolling up recklessly and so aggressively in a squad car towards a person who may have a gun according to 9-1-1 calls? I am not a police tactics expert...but I have some experience in this arena and I am pretty positive that this was a violation of training and protocols.Sure, the cop might be able to say that the suspect pulled the gun and thus he had to shoot. That is because they gave themselves no time to assess and deal with the situation appropriately. Absolutely heart breaking to watch this kid just being a little boy walking around aimlessly, kind of bored, throwing snow around, kicking snow and then just see him get gunned down like that.

This is the sort of case that we should be having a national dialogue about. This is the dead citizen that literally could be any of our kids. What if the 9-1-1 call was wrong and the kid didn't have a gun, but was carrying something that looked like a gun. Maybe he made something at home or whatever. Well...the cop was firing as soon as the kid made some sort of motion that he felt threatened him in some way.

I don't get it. Just sad. Terribly sad.
Teach your kids to respect authority, always. If you have a grievance, learn the appropriate process and redress it accordingly. Never disobey the instructions of an officer. Listen carefully to instructions. Say "yes Sir/Mam", "no Sir/Mam." Even if you feel wrong or slighted, there is nothing to gain by mouthing off or challenging directives. Again, if you feel you have a legitimate gripe, gather your evidence and thoughts and redress it in the appropriate forum. Why is it that we've given up on such a wide swath of our citizenry by assuming they are incapable of understanding the above?

 
Anybody talk yet about how the prosecutors handed out a document of a Missouri statute that said police officers could lawfully kill a fleeing criminal (regardless of fear for their own life) at the very beginning of Grand Jury proceedings and only revealed to the jurors on Nov 21st (after testimony had been finished) that the statute had, in fact, been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1985 and shouldn't be taken in to account?
BOOM

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
I don't know all the facts save for the video and article...but my first impression is that there is something terribly wrong with the way these officers conducted themselves that day. Why the hell are you rolling up recklessly and so aggressively in a squad car towards a person who may have a gun according to 9-1-1 calls? I am not a police tactics expert...but I have some experience in this arena and I am pretty positive that this was a violation of training and protocols.Sure, the cop might be able to say that the suspect pulled the gun and thus he had to shoot. That is because they gave themselves no time to assess and deal with the situation appropriately. Absolutely heart breaking to watch this kid just being a little boy walking around aimlessly, kind of bored, throwing snow around, kicking snow and then just see him get gunned down like that.

This is the sort of case that we should be having a national dialogue about. This is the dead citizen that literally could be any of our kids. What if the 9-1-1 call was wrong and the kid didn't have a gun, but was carrying something that looked like a gun. Maybe he made something at home or whatever. Well...the cop was firing as soon as the kid made some sort of motion that he felt threatened him in some way.

I don't get it. Just sad. Terribly sad.
Teach your kids to respect authority, always. If you have a grievance, learn the appropriate process and redress it accordingly. Never disobey the instructions of an officer. Listen carefully to instructions. Say "yes Sir/Mam", "no Sir/Mam." Even if you feel wrong or slighted, there is nothing to gain by mouthing off or challenging directives. Again, if you feel you have a legitimate gripe, gather your evidence and thoughts and redress it in the appropriate forum. Why is it that we've given up on such a wide swath of our citizenry by assuming they are incapable of understanding the above?
I am not following your response. Are you speaking in a general sense or are you specifically addressing this case with the 12 year old got shot. You kind of lost me here with this response.

 
You can't be serious. It's the prosecutors job to get an indictment. The DA did everything that he could to exonerate Wilson. There's a reason why he's 0-5 when getting an indictment on a cop. Dig deeper.
You are absolutely wrong. A prosecutor has an ethical duty not to bring charges if there is insufficient evidence, or in this case if a shooting was justified. News Flash: It was.
Here is another News Flash for you: The prosecutor is an elected official. Despite "an ethnical duty" decisions to indict or not to indict are quite often political decisions which trump any ethical duty. To make this sound as if ethics are the only consideration for a prosecutor or a D.A. is rather naïve.

 
It's always tragic when the world loses violent thugs. :tips40:
Like that kid in Atlanta playing with a toy gun? He probably was going to turn into a thug anyways, right?
No idea who that is. Do you have video of him robbing stores and assaulting little old shop owners?
Maybe he is referring to this one in Cleveland, I'd say eye witness accounts and video here exonerate the officer:http://m.nydailynews.com/news/national/video-shows-tamir-rice-12-shot-dead-cleveland-police-article-1.2025132?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+nydnrss%2Fgossip%2Fgatecrasher+%28Gossip%2FConfidenti%40l%29
I don't know all the facts save for the video and article...but my first impression is that there is something terribly wrong with the way these officers conducted themselves that day. Why the hell are you rolling up recklessly and so aggressively in a squad car towards a person who may have a gun according to 9-1-1 calls? I am not a police tactics expert...but I have some experience in this arena and I am pretty positive that this was a violation of training and protocols.Sure, the cop might be able to say that the suspect pulled the gun and thus he had to shoot. That is because they gave themselves no time to assess and deal with the situation appropriately. Absolutely heart breaking to watch this kid just being a little boy walking around aimlessly, kind of bored, throwing snow around, kicking snow and then just see him get gunned down like that.

This is the sort of case that we should be having a national dialogue about. This is the dead citizen that literally could be any of our kids. What if the 9-1-1 call was wrong and the kid didn't have a gun, but was carrying something that looked like a gun. Maybe he made something at home or whatever. Well...the cop was firing as soon as the kid made some sort of motion that he felt threatened him in some way.

I don't get it. Just sad. Terribly sad.
Teach your kids to respect authority, always. If you have a grievance, learn the appropriate process and redress it accordingly. Never disobey the instructions of an officer. Listen carefully to instructions. Say "yes Sir/Mam", "no Sir/Mam." Even if you feel wrong or slighted, there is nothing to gain by mouthing off or challenging directives. Again, if you feel you have a legitimate gripe, gather your evidence and thoughts and redress it in the appropriate forum. Why is it that we've given up on such a wide swath of our citizenry by assuming they are incapable of understanding the above?
I am not following your response. Are you speaking in a general sense or are you specifically addressing this case with the 12 year old got shot. You kind of lost me here with this response.
Just watched the video of the 12 yo. Agree it's very sad and way too rash a confrontation. I was speaking generally. Stupid to be carrying a realistic looking gun in public, but he didn't seem to have time to do anything much, and I couldn't see that he was acting aggressively. I may challenge what role model he was emulating, but that incident happened way too fast and I agree there was a better means to confront. No one was in imminent peril. No one around. Bad police work there.

 
You can't be serious. It's the prosecutors job to get an indictment. The DA did everything that he could to exonerate Wilson. There's a reason why he's 0-5 when getting an indictment on a cop. Dig deeper.
You are absolutely wrong. A prosecutor has an ethical duty not to bring charges if there is insufficient evidence, or in this case if a shooting was justified. News Flash: It was.
Here is another News Flash for you: The prosecutor is an elected official. Despite "an ethnical duty" decisions to indict or not to indict are quite often political decisions which trump any ethical duty. To make this sound as if ethics are the only consideration for a prosecutor or a D.A. is rather naïve.
Disagree. You don't throw good cops that did nothing wrong to the wolves. Prosecutor didn't. Good on him.

 
Anybody talk yet about how the prosecutors handed out a document of a Missouri statute that said police officers could lawfully kill a fleeing criminal (regardless of fear for their own life) at the very beginning of Grand Jury proceedings and only revealed to the jurors on Nov 21st (after testimony had been finished) that the statute had, in fact, been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1985 and shouldn't be taken in to account?
BOOM
http://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/grand-jury-wrangled-confusing-instructions

The following excerpt from the grand jury transcript is from last Friday.

“Real quick, can I interrupt about something?” interjected Alizadeh. “Previously, in the very beginning of this process, I printed out a statute for you that was, the statute in Missouri for the use of force to affect an arrest.

“So if you all want to get those out. What we have discovered, and we have been going along with this, doing our research, is that the statute in the State of Missouri does not comply with the case law.

“....And so the statute for the use of force to affect an arrest in the state of Missouri does not comply with Missouri Supreme Court, I'm sorry United States Supreme Court cases....

“So the statute I gave you, if you want to fold that in half just so that you know don't necessarily rely on that because there is a portion of that that doesn't comply with the law.

“…I don't want you to get confused and don’t rely on that copy or that print-out of the statute that I've given you a long time ago.”

A grand juror asks, “So we’re to disregard this?”

Alizadehanswers: “It is not entirely incorrect or inaccurate, but there is something in it that’s not correct, ignore it totally.”

When a grand juror asks more questions,

Whirley chimes in, “We don’t want to get into a law class.”
 
Anybody talk yet about how the prosecutors handed out a document of a Missouri statute that said police officers could lawfully kill a fleeing criminal (regardless of fear for their own life) at the very beginning of Grand Jury proceedings and only revealed to the jurors on Nov 21st (after testimony had been finished) that the statute had, in fact, been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1985 and shouldn't be taken in to account?
No, no one has.
 
Surprised that Wolf Blitzer was giving it to the Brown family lawyer pretty good last night. Saying the reason the police were called in the first place was because Brown stole cigars, intimidated and shoved a store clerk. Browns lawyers kept trying to deflect that fact but Wolf stayed on him. Wolf basically said that Brown seemed to be on a rampage that day.

 
Surprised that Wolf Blitzer was giving it to the Brown family lawyer pretty good last night. Saying the reason the police were called in the first place was because Brown stole cigars, intimidated and shoved a store clerk. Browns lawyers kept trying to deflect that fact but Wolf stayed on him. Wolf basically said that Brown seemed to be on a rampage that day.
But he was a good kid.

 
Anybody talk yet about how the prosecutors handed out a document of a Missouri statute that said police officers could lawfully kill a fleeing criminal (regardless of fear for their own life) at the very beginning of Grand Jury proceedings and only revealed to the jurors on Nov 21st (after testimony had been finished) that the statute had, in fact, been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1985 and shouldn't be taken in to account?
BOOM
http://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/grand-jury-wrangled-confusing-instructions

The following excerpt from the grand jury transcript is from last Friday.

“Real quick, can I interrupt about something?” interjected Alizadeh. “Previously, in the very beginning of this process, I printed out a statute for you that was, the statute in Missouri for the use of force to affect an arrest.

“So if you all want to get those out. What we have discovered, and we have been going along with this, doing our research, is that the statute in the State of Missouri does not comply with the case law.

“....And so the statute for the use of force to affect an arrest in the state of Missouri does not comply with Missouri Supreme Court, I'm sorry United States Supreme Court cases....

“So the statute I gave you, if you want to fold that in half just so that you know don't necessarily rely on that because there is a portion of that that doesn't comply with the law.

“…I don't want you to get confused and don’t rely on that copy or that print-out of the statute that I've given you a long time ago.”

A grand juror asks, “So we’re to disregard this?”

Alizadehanswers: “It is not entirely incorrect or inaccurate, but there is something in it that’s not correct, ignore it totally.”

When a grand juror asks more questions,

Whirley chimes in, “We don’t want to get into a law class.”
Ignore it totally is not very ambiguous...but then he had to make it ambiguous with the other claptrap.

 
You guys realize you are revealing a lot about your positions and your desired outcome when you start saying in the essence "ok fine but what about that other black kid the cops shot???"
Uhm, yes? You realize the protests that are happening aren't just about (and I would personally argue aren't even mostly about) Michael Brown, right?
I'm guessing >50% of the protestors think Michael Brown was shot in the back while running away.
It would be interesting to do a poll of the protestors to see exactly how knowledgeable they are of the facts. I have a feeling that most of them know more than you think they do.

But then, I'm talking about the protestors, not the looters. Those are two distinct groups, despite the attempt of people like Max Threshold and others to portray them all as the same.

 
Both sides tend to be ignorant of the facts here, which is not surprising. But in listening to public opinion yesterday on the news, on talk radio, and talking to people in person, it was my own impression that the people who thought Wilson was justified were far more ignorant than those who were upset by the shooting. People seemed to have no idea that there was any distance between the two men. Most people simply assumed that Brown attacked Wilson (who was minding his own business), went for his gun, and Wilson responded by shooting Brown to death.

On both sides, a majority assumed that there was a trial and Wilson was found not guilty.

 

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