lawgator1
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I'm not ready to say he "planted" a weapon. If they fought over the taser, and it fell as the guy ran, he might go back and get it to prevent it from being picked up and put it on the ground as evidence. We'll see if his fingerprints are on it.
I'm not ready to say he "planted" a weapon. If they fought over the taser, and it fell as the guy ran, he might go back and get it to prevent it from being picked up and put it on the ground as evidence. We'll see if his fingerprints are on it.
Watch the video here:
Video Shows Officer Michael Slager Shooting Unarmed Black Man In The Back In South Carolina
The full video. It's my opinion that the second cop, if he didn't report the first one dropping the Taser next to the body, should be charged as an accessory as well.
All in all, I don't think this is a case you want to take to court as part of the defense, LG.
Watch the video here:
Video Shows Officer Michael Slager Shooting Unarmed Black Man In The Back In South Carolina
The full video. It's my opinion that the second cop, if he didn't report the first one dropping the Taser next to the body, should be charged as an accessory as well.
All in all, I don't think this is a case you want to take to court as part of the defense, LG.
This is probably one of the more reasonable posts I've seen you make in this thread.
For the sake of discussion, what incentives would work better?
Whether you are a cop, a DA, or a judge people like to see convictions. Those numbers will get you ahead. So if you want to move up, you need to make arrests. You need to make arrests with charges that will stick.
In comes the war on drugs. It unnecessarily creates a reason to police minority neighborhoods. Not only are there easy arrests to be had, but they are the kind of criminal that is easier to convict. Which forces cops to profile (anybody in their position would...it's why black cops do it). With bigger budgets and asset forfeitures to be had, the war on drugs is a very attractive way to grow your PD, but it's not necessary (IMO) and it essentially makes cops racist.
Get rid of the war on drugs and you get rid of a lot of the profiling problem.
Okay, got that. But again, what incentives would be better for the departments and the public as a whole? Revenue neutral of course.
I'm not talking about bonus $ incentives like they're sales guys, if that's what you're asking. Use those war on drugs resources to prevent and investigate violent crime and property crime, instead of victimless crimes. Promote guys who make their neighborhoods safer. Promote guys that solve burglaries. Don't promote the guy who made the most arrests, or who seized $60k in cocaine money. He probably did nice work to seize that $60k, but that doesn't serve and protect anybody, IMO.
Say we as a nation suddenly have a change of heart and make everything legal. Fine and all and that puts a lot of cops out of work, but no big deal. The high school dropouts can find other work. Anyway, what takes it's place? One thing about organized crime, to include the drug trade, is they suddenly won't just go straight and get 9-5 jobs. And something else will take the place of drugs along the way. And there will still be a black market for the drug trade even with legalization. Just like there still is with alcohol and tobacco on a more limited basis.
I'm not talking about bonus $ incentives like they're sales guys, if that's what you're asking. Use those war on drugs resources to prevent and investigate violent crime and property crime, instead of victimless crimes. Promote guys who make their neighborhoods safer. Promote guys that solve burglaries. Don't promote the guy who made the most arrests, or who seized $60k in cocaine money. He probably did nice work to seize that $60k, but that doesn't serve and protect anybody, IMO.
I agree with a portion of what you are saying, however I will have to disagree on the victimless crime piece if you are lumping the war on drugs into that category. Spend one day in a Children's hospital and you may change your mind.
So don't do it because it won't completely rid us of organized crime? Sure, people will find illegal enterprises to engage in, but they sell drugs because it's the most profitable. I can't see how getting rid of their most profitable enterprise is undesirable.
Also, who cares about the black market for alcohol and tobacco? Is it really that big of a national problem? I've never even considered it a problem worth addressing.
So the point is worth debating though.
I don't disagree with your premise of rewarding those that achieve above and beyond with things other than drug busts. But promotions means more money, so on and so forth. Where does the revenue come from?
Revenue for promotions? I would guess they don't need extra money for that. I figure they are already promoting guys, just promote the guys that follow the right incentives. You could always take some of the money we save by ending our "Billion dollar a week, kill-brown-people habit", AKA the war on drugs.
Just curious though, had the woman killed the 2 people on bicycles would your view on proper handling of this case have changed?
It wouldn't matter... the safest thing to do is shoot the tires and demobilize the car, not shoot the driver and risk the car going wildly and more erratically with a dead woman's foot still on the gas...
