I don't know how pointing out that a cop is unlikely to get there fast enough in many scenarios is being misconstrued as offensive. Cops aren't omnipotent and omnipresent, it's not a knock, just a fact. That's why people buy guns for home defense.
Get a grip.
Putting aside any bias based on what I do for a living, what I have found after having tried a number of cases involving allegations of police misconduct is that most people begin with the presumption that the officer was trying to do the right thing. They believe that they are hard-working and motivated by good things.
Not to say they just blindly accept it, and if a plaintiff can prove the officer acted wrongly they will be quick to find in favor of the plaintiff. But the starting point I think for most people is that the other side needs to prove the officer did something wrong, rather than the other way around.
No, I'm waiting for eyewitnesses and forensics to tell us something.
I mean, are you not a little skeptical of the claim that cops pulled up, she went to the driver and started explaining what she saw, and for no reason the passenger took his gun out and shot past his partner to kill her for no reason?
I'm going to play devil's advocate here. Imagine it from his perspective. He's been there in the middle, he's stopped in progress violent crimes and it's being said that cops arrive after the fact.
It's like telling a stay at home mom of three that she doesn't do anything all day when in reality she gets the kids ready, feeds them, drops them off, cleans the house, laundry, goes to the grocery store, picks the kids up and takes them to extracurricular activities, comes home, cooks dinner, washes the dishes, bathes all the kids, gets them ready for bed, puts them to bed and finally has a moment to sit at 9:00 but the husband wants some action and says "how can you be tired? you don't work"
Not a very good analogy because in the mom example, she's being told she doesn't do anything all day. Huff didn't say cops didn't do anything but fill reports, that was assumed what Huff meant and he (and others) missed Huff's point completely.
It doesn't change the fact he had an irrational, emotional response on par with the triggered responses that one side so reguarly ridicules when the other side does it.
or better yet, if this is a thread about deaths from malpractice or wrong decisions in the medical industry, which if I remember right has significantly more death than civilians from officers, and someone said the following
"doctors rarely know what is actually wrong. they just arbitrarily guess."
a vn doctor gets mad at that
other posters come on and say "well it's impossible to know every thing especially in a strangers body."
it diminishes the Doctors years of study, experience and to a degree, importance in the situation if he or she is just "guessing"
And I'm sorry you're too emotionally driven to understand his point.
lol emotionally driven? I'm not a cop. I have zero emotional investment. As I prefaced my entire contribution, I'm looking at it through his eyes too. It's sad that we have so few people that even attempt to look at situations from both sides.
Not a very good analogy because in the mom example, she's being told she doesn't do anything all day. Huff didn't say cops didn't do anything but fill reports, that was assumed what Huuff meant and he (and others) missed Huff's point completely.
It doesn't change the fact he had an irrational, emotional response on par with the triggered responses that one side so regularly ridicules when the other side does it.
The article said it was for "no reason"?
If there is a reason, why hasn't it been explained, yet?
No reason has been given, correct.
Then again, no information has been provided at all, really.
If I had to guess, there was something very strange going on and they are waiting on toxicology or something similar from the M.E.