Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Just this morning, I had crap coming across my twitter feed blaming everything on the Waller PD when they neither made the traffic stop nor housed Bland. Then they wanted to blame the SO after being corrected and claim that jail staff caused her extreme emotional distress by having locked her up...meanwhile continuing to ALSO ignore the tox screen and more than 30 cuts on her wrist in various states of healing.
If he had probable cause for any of the things you mentioned, then my prior statements are out the window.
If he had probable cause to think she was intoxicated and let her go, he might have some slight amount of culpability (although not nearly as much as the drunk driver herself). But he can't be held responsible for failing to act in the absence of probable cause.
In essence, you are saying "Police officers have a dangerous job, so I give them the benefit of the doubt when they do things that make their job even more dangerous." This makes no sense. In light of the inherent danger that the job poses, I'm inclined to go light on cops who err on the side of avoiding conflict, not those who escalate it unnecessarily.
How did he make his job more dangerous other than pulling over a driver under the influence? If she had followed his commands, she would have prevented all of the problems.
You're absolutely right.
There exists some culture in law enforcement where a lot of us take pride in sustaining our situation-controlling egos and using any possible technical bitchslap powers on people with wrong attitudes. This is within our authority, but it is still wrong and it makes me uncomfortable.
Though it's impossible to find perfect people to be police officers, we should change the culture to one of more stoicism and responsibility, and we should pay and respect police officers more as a society.
I'm not saying things are perfect, but so much has improved, and it seems like a new, younger generation are becoming enraged and divisive over incidents that are being blown out of proportion by the media.
Did the po-po murder Sandra and try to cover it up? Conspiracy theory here: http://asheepnomore.net/2015/07/25/anonymous-exposes-texas-police-for-murdering-sandra-bland/
Nonsensical speculation. However, I understand why these types of theories get promoted. If this is a pure suicide case in which the county failed to put Bland on suicide watch, her family may win a civil lawsuit against the county (and rightly so). However, that's not a particularly big political and PR weapon, because most sensible people put most of the blame for a suicide on the decedent, not the people who didn't protect her from herself. Furthermore, it's relatively boring and a lot harder to turn that into a racial story than a trans-agency murder conspiracy driven by some circumstantial theories but nothing that would rise to the level of real evidence.
That would be a more viable argument if she kills herself in the first 24 hours. However, even if they noted her as a suicide precaution and put her on a watch immediately after booking, you do not keep someone in that condition into perpetuity. After a day, they would be moved out of a 15-minute watch status and housed consistent with their custody recommendation. And prior suicide attempt by itself does not warrant placement in a 15-minute status unless there is ALSO current suicidal ideation expressed by the individual.
In this instance, though, she also had three days to realize that her actions were probably going to have cost her the job she claimed to have just been offered not to mention the lack of effort being demonstrated by her friends to answer phone calls and to go post bond (not a difficult thing to do even on a weekend).
That law seems a little ridiculous. So officers are supposed to assess the threat before they get too close?
A 911 call came in saying a man was waving a pistol at people in a park. I think they had to get close to protect innocent citizens.
The reason Rice is dead is because he was carrying a toy that looked like a gun and pointed it at a police officer.
I just think the whole narrative that this is the police officer's fault is dumb. The fault is at a minimum Tamir's decision to point the gun at people causing the 911 call. If he is not wielding a toy gun, none of this occurs.
Didn't Emanuel cover it up until after the election? If so, not only should he be fired, he should be prosecuted.I don't have any problems with the Cleveland officers actions or not being charged. It's a sad situation.
I can't fathom the calls for Rahm Emanuel to be fired after the murder charges were filed on that police officer.
There is one thing to be said about many of these cities. Everyone is/was expecting them to blowup Ferguson and Baltimore style but they the protests have remained peaceful.
They had an anti-violence rally in Newark... and a fight broke out....
Ahhh my new home state. I'm so proud...
* Predict HORNS-AGGIES *
Sat, Nov 30 • 6:30 PM on ABC