Good cop: "Can't call attention to it, it would ruin my credibility."Well, of course. Why would good cops do anything about about bad cops?
(incident gets found out anyway)
Good cop: "Dangit. There goes my credibility."
--Patrick
Good cop: "Can't call attention to it, it would ruin my credibility."Well, of course. Why would good cops do anything about about bad cops?
Which is the situation our society finds itself in now. I know that the vast majority of police are honest, hard-working, brave men and women doing one of the most difficult jobs there is. But there have been too many incidents of police literally and figuratively getting away with murder for police to have any credibility at all.Good cop: "Can't call attention to it, it would ruin my credibility."
(incident gets found out anyway)
Good cop: "Dangit. There goes my credibility."
--Patrick
The problem is, unless there's buy-in from management, saying anything can and does harm your career. Look at it this way, if you had to say something about something that was happening in your job but you knew that you could potentially lose your gig, would you say anything? For those of us who just have a job (like retail or at a college, etc.) we might not care. But a police officer is not just a career - it's a mindset and way of life. Like the military or health care profession that takes a lot of schooling and training, losing your job can be like losing yourself. So again it's not the individual but the institutionalized racism that does in the good guys.Which is the situation our society finds itself in now. I know that the vast majority of police are honest, hard-working, brave men and women doing one of the most difficult jobs there is. But there have been too many incidents of police literally and figuratively getting away with murder for police to have any credibility at all.
Yes, and I have. Co-worker and then-superior who played together to get up to some not-so-acceptable habits. Got most of them thrown out of the company. Like health professionals and the military, these are people who are supposed to be the epitome of Good, people we place trust in - often Life-or-Death. Especially in this sort of functions, the good guys have to dare to stand up. Yes, I understand feeling like shutting up if you're the only one who thinks something is wrong. That's what IA and similar are for. That such departments tend to get cast as the "bad guys" in cop shows irks me to no end.if you had to say something about something that was happening in your job but you knew that you could potentially lose your gig, would you say anything?
This was just the dumbest, most senseless death ever...NYPD Officer Peter Liang found guilty of manslaughter in fatal shooting of Akai Gurley
Peter Liang, a rookie police officer, and his partner were on the top floor of a housing project and about to begin a vertical patrol of the stairwell. Liang had his weapon drawn and accidentally fired a round into the stairwell. The bullet ricocheted and hit Akai Gurley on the floor below. Gurley bled out while a neighbor rendered aid. Neither Liang nor his partner made a proper radio call to report the incident. Reportedly, the two officers were not supposed to be conducting a vertical patrol. (Daily News)
To be fair, the length is more indicative of forum drama than it is necessarily a reflection of the actual problem.I just want to point out this thread is 53 pages now. Just let that sink in a bit.
Gee, it's almost like there's a serious police brutality problem in this country.It's still 30 pages. That's pretty bad.
here's the piece de resistance
THIN BLUE LINEOk, so obviously they're horrible people. Was there really no one smart enough to say "hey guys...this will make us look really bad"?
I'm assuming it is the same mindset that led the NYPD to start #myNYPD and encouraged people to send in stories of their favorite NYPD interactions.Ok, so obviously they're horrible people. Was there really no one smart enough to say "hey guys...this will make us look really bad"?
I don't know if you watched the video (don't blame you if you didn't) but there was no time for Tamir to put the weapon down between when the cop left the car and when he was killed.who chose to reach for the weapon when approached by police rather than obey their commands to keep their hands away from the weapon
It seems like I've read different accounts. Are you saying Tamir was holding the gun in his hand when he was shot?I don't know if you watched the video (don't blame you if you didn't) but there was no time for Tamir to put the weapon down between when the cop left the car and when he was killed.
And here we see the common Leftist Ideologue, unable to cope with any information not in lockstep with its worldview, viciously lashing out in an attempt not to settle or address disparity, but to silence the disagreement. Let us attempt to speak to it in its own language:steinman, with all due respect, you're completely fucking wrong about everything regarding this case and every time you've posted about police abuse/brutality in general. I'm sure your #BlueLivesMatter facebook group is missing you, though
Krzykowski mentioned that she had overheard security guards heckling prisoners. One officer had told an inmate, “Go ahead and kill yourself—no one will miss you.” Again, Perez seemed unfazed. “It’s just words,” she said. Then, as Krzykowski recalls it, Perez leaned forward and gave her some advice: “You have to remember that we have to have a good working relationship with security.”
Krzykowski discovered, however, that many inmates were locked up in single-person cells. Solitary confinement was supposed to be reserved for prisoners who had committed serious disciplinary infractions. In forced isolation, inmates often deteriorated rapidly. As Krzykowski put it, “So many guys would be mobile and interactive when they first came to the T.C.U., and then a few months later they would be sleeping in their cells in their own waste.”
“What’s going on with Rainey?” Krzykowski asked a guard.
“Oh, don’t worry, we’ll put him in the shower,” he told her.
Krzykowski remembers hearing this and feeling reassured. “I was thinking, O.K., lots of times people feel good after a shower, so maybe he will calm down. A nice, gentle shower with warm water.”
The next day, Krzykowski learned from some nurses that a couple of guards had indeed escorted Rainey to the shower at about eight the previous night. But he hadn’t made it back to his cell. He had collapsed while the water was running. At 10:07 P.M., he was pronounced dead.
Krzykowski assumed that he must have had a heart attack or somehow committed suicide. But the nurses said that Rainey had been locked in a stall whose water supply was delivered through a hose controlled by the guards. The water was a hundred and eighty degrees, hot enough to brew a cup of tea—or, as it soon occurred to Krzykowski, to cook a bowl of ramen noodles. (Someone had apparently tampered with the T.C.U.’s water heater.) It was later revealed that Rainey had burns on more than ninety per cent of his body, and that his skin fell off at the touch.
There's a lot more, and it's a lot worse.In a recent survey by the Bureau of Correctional Health Services, in New York City, more than a third of mental-health personnel working in prisons admitted to feeling “that their ethics were regularly compromised in their work setting.” There was a pervasive fear that “security staff might retaliate if health staff reported patient abuse.” Violence toward inmates flourished at the city’s main prison, Rikers Island, and it was often ignored by the dozens of counsellors and psychologists on staff. One counsellor who did not ignore it was Randi Cawley. In December, 2012, she reported having seen guards beat an adolescent inmate who was handcuffed to a gurney. But other witnesses refused to confirm her account, and Cawley began receiving threats: dead flowers placed on her computer, ominous phone calls. She felt so unsafe inside Rikers that she quit.
My point was that there is no way that in the two seconds from when the cops exited the car and when they shot him, they told him to put the gun down, and he refused. There was literally nothing he could've done to avoid being shot when the cops showed up.It seems like I've read different accounts. Are you saying Tamir was holding the gun in his hand when he was shot?
http://www.cnn.com/videos/justice/2...t-nr.cnn/video/playlists/tamir-rice-shooting/
We don't have laws regulating open carry, so yes... but it's also the kind of thing you don't do in the cities period. They'll usually haul you in for disturbing the peace if you do, assuming it's not an unloaded long arm slung on your shoulder (which is generally considered fine anywhere that isn't downtown).Also, isn't Ohio an open-carry state?