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In this instance, they knew everything they needed to know. He got into an argument with his dad and drove away. They knew exactly who the kid was, where he lived, its not like this kid was getting away with taking the truck. But yeah, lets force the issue, endanger lives, and ultimately kill this kid because we want to handle it now, and not in a couple hours. It was twice suggested to back off, by police personnel. You act as if backing off and picking him up later is the most ridiculous thing ever. Yeah, lets just kill him. |
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The kid was stealing unless his name is on the title of the truck or his dad said he had permission to take it. The kid was a ****ing moron, but I guess that's what happens when you're raised by a moron. The dad knew the kid was having a hard time and instead of letting the kid leave for awhile to clear his head he decides to call the cops. Nothing like a little grand theft auto or joyriding charge on your record to bring father and son together. The police did their job and while it's a shame someone died, it could have been worse. |
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I can tell youre going to be real popular here. |
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n00b |
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I'm not even sure why I am continuing this conversation with you. You clearly have no idea what "protect and serve" means. I pray you're never in a crisis situation where you have to make a life or death decision. |
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Hopefully you don't find yourself mourning the loss of a loved one because law enforcement decided it was easier to but a bullet in them than to just arrest them. |
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I'm assuming you didn't watch the ****ing dashcam video. |
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Learn to read. |
Another tobacco-related death. How sad.
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Don't blame the officer for doing his job. |
Dad: "Hello? Police? I want my truck back. My kid took it."
Cops: "Got your truck. It has 6 bullet holes in it and we umm kinda sorta killed the driver. Did you know him?" ... ... Long silent pause "There is a towing fee that is required when you claim the vehicle." |
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Second of all, if you're going to correct someone's grammar, correct all of it. Y-O-U-apostrophe-R-E means "you are." Y-O-U-R means your. |
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I didn't say a cop should never "light em up." Most people will pull over when you do. If they run, you can chase them. If it gets out of hand, and it becomes a serious danger to innocent bystanders, you need to rethink what's important. I pray I never have to call a cop. They might send you. |
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So this kid, revving the engine of a stuck truck, the only way to resolve this situation is to fill the cab with gunfire. That's hilarious. |
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Just pointing out the irony in someone calling someone else an idiot while not using correct English. Sorry, if I offended you. |
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Hey, if some of you can't appreciate the job LE does on a daily basis and don't understand the risks they take every time they go out on patrol, that's fine. Everyone has their own bias and agenda, I guess.
But I'm also guessing most of you will be calling them for assistance when the shit does hit the fan. I pray they don't hesitate to act when your life or that of your family's is hanging in the balance. |
If you are still wailing over this, even after watching the video, then you are purposefully being a miserable dumbass. The car chase and shooting were justifiable.
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We pay your salary. Don't get cocky. |
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Well, I guess if that's what you think. |
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I've said all along that the kid definitely deserved his fate. I just think they could have done better in avoiding endangering innocents by picking this guy up at home later. I don't think these particular cops are the billy badass types, I think they just needed to weigh the danger to civilians a little higher than catching the car thief. |
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And that is the very sad and unfortunate thing about this situation. I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree on the other stuff. |
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It was pure luck that he didn't kill an innocent going through that red light at that speed in that traffic. By continuing to chase him, they risked him doing that possibly several more times. And I don't think that was worth the risk. Fortunately it worked out in this case, but it could have gone a lot worse. |
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Watch the video from the cop car. http://www.kcci.com/news/central-iow...z/-/index.html |
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I would tell dad to parent up, go to family court, file restraining order, change the locks, take back keys, sack up, etc. long before I took a stolen vehicle report. But the situation I was referring to may or may not match up to the OP |
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I don't see what is so hard to comprehend here. Tablet is saying that there is a likely chance that if someone who is being chased by the cops "gets away" they will slow down, ditch the car, and get somewhere out of the public. The sight of a cop car in their rear view is obviously escalating the situation. There is a reason that is protocol for some departments. In this case, however, one the cop was hit he was unable to disengage and the maniac needed to be stopped. |
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The way this is phrased sounds like you don't understand that everyone, eventually, dies. |
Look, we need better training for cops. That's the final answer. If somebody is just trying to get away, they shouldn't have to pay with their lives unless they are putting people in DIRECT danger. The fact that he was putting people in danger 30 seconds ago doesn't mean dick. There is no immediate need to fire your weapon. I understand having it drawn. I understand you gotta protect yourself from a criminal who is putting his own and others' lives at risk with his reckless behavior. But there was zero NEED (I want you guys to look at that word again... NEED) to fire his weapon. Weapons should only be fired when they NEED to be. And if you think this weapon NEEDED to be fired, then you are not seeing beyond your principle to stand up for cops no matter the circumstances.
I don't think this cop is a bad guy, or needs to lose his job or anything. He was put in a tough spot, saw a problem that looked to him like a nail, and decided to use his hammer. But cops need to able to recognize problems that AREN'T nails. Or, perhaps in this case, was a former nail that had turned into something way less serious by the time the gun was drawn. |
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This should also be a lesson to the rest of us that the days of using the police to help calm domestic situations down are over. Calling the cops is now just asking for the situation to escalate.
It used to be that if you and husband got into too many drunk saturday night fights, you could teach your loser husband a lesson by calling the cops. Have him sit a night in jail without his shoelaces and come home all glassy eyed and apologetic and that'd be the end of it. Or if you wanted to scare your druggie kid straight, you could have some cool neighbor cops show up and cuff him... Maybe even put him in the back of a squad car for a bit until he promises he'll clean up. Then the cops fill out some paperwork and go away and that's the end of it. Now, really all you're doing is asking for HUNDREDS of dollars of outrageous court fees and principled judges looking for convictions. Zero tolerance policies that put your "stoner" kid into jail or juvie for months. Soccer moms being hog tied and questioned for hours because some twat didn't like her little kids putting rocks in her mailbox... Cops that kick open your front door with weapons drawn because they heard it was a dangerous situation when really all it is is a drunk housewife with some scissors cutting up pictures of her new husbands ex girlfriends... Well, enjoy paying for your new door, $1000 bail money, and $600 in court costs because the people you called to "help" are about to make this situation way worse. Oh, also... If you panic and do something stupid, you're odds of being dead by the end of the night just went from 1 in a couple million to 1 in a couple thousand. The fact is, cops used to be awesome citizens with a feeling of community who wanted to serve and protect. Now, police forces are so militarized that calling them at all is like calling out the national guard, and because once in a great while, a cop is actually in a dangerous situation, they treat too many (most?) calls like they're responding to a terrorist threat instead of coming to help keep the peace. |
One shouldn't call the police on their own family unless it's absolutely necessary. There's not much good that can come from it and lot's of bad that can.
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