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However, imo the cop is the one who set up the situation that presented a possible threat to him and his partner.
It defies common sense that they were sneaking around in the back yard when presumably they knew the homeowner was likely in the house. Especially in a state like Texas where a large part of the citizenry is armed for self defense.
If they were too afraid to go to the front door, they should have just parked in front of her house and addressed her from the loudspeaker on their car. Not like they didn't wake up and traumatize the whole neighborhood by shooting her anyway.
It also sounds like even if he had announced himself she may not have been able to hear what he was saying through the apparently closed window.
Haven't heard one police officer comment that suggests this was an 'honest' mistake.
Everyone seems to be agreement that the officer was WAY out of line.
With all due respect to your elaborate excuses for why it was okay, I'm going with his boss who was going to fire him for his actions a.
This is really an unbelievable tragedy and I can not imagine how any trained police officer could do something this horrible. In your own home and a cop shoots through a window and kills you.
They had better not sweep this one under the carpet and let him off.
A neighbor calls the cops because her door was open for x amount of hours?
Damn, the indoctrination centers have worked well.
I leave my door open all the time when it cools down.
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Originally Posted by Joe the Photog
When I lived at my last place, I did not have working AC so I would always have my door open when I was awake and I'd often be awake until 4 or 5 am. Glad no one called LEOs on me. Of course, I'm white, so they would have knocked on the screen door or yelled out, "Police! Is everyone OK?!"
I have A/C, but like I said, when it cools down, I leave my door open at night. Yes, all the way until morning. I have one medium sized dog whose bark will, more than likely, cause someone to think twice about entering. If that wasn't enough, I have a second dog handy - and when the first one starts going, they both start going - if someone is stupid enough to still try to break in through the locked metal (not thin wire) screen door and confront both dogs - well, I don't feel sorry for the attack they are going to receive from 2 sets of teeth.
I guess I better start closing it so some untrained cop doesn't shoot me through a window.
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Originally Posted by Kavalier
I heard she was holding the gun.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Blondy
It hasn't been reported that she was holding it. The report I heard said it was found on the floor of the bedroom she was in, so I presume she was holding it and probably dropped it when she was shot. Doesn't seem like most people would leave a gun laying on the floor esp with a child in the house.
And we go back to training. This time, no one can use the excuse that he was off duty, as if a cop turns off their training the second they clock out for the day. As was stated in the article, his bodycam shows that he never knocked on her door, never announced and identified himself, and was walking around the house shining a light in her windows.
What would you think if you were sitting at home, minding your own business when suddenly, you see someone outside shining a light in your windows? You aren't involved in any domestic dispute, you haven't done anything wrong, you're simply sitting at home, doing your thing? You have no idea who the hell is out there, prowling around, looking in your windows - what do you think any person would do if they had access to a firearm? They would go get it. It would be nuts not to go get it in that situation.
She had, according to the article, no idea that was a cop. The cop was sent on a welfare check, not on a call because she had done anything wrong. He never identified himself as a cop - gone to her door, knocked on it, rang the bell, said "Ft Worth Police" or anything. If the article is correct, and if she was holding her gun (which I did not read that she was) it would be understandable because anyone at that point would have thought it was an intruder. If that's how it played out, nope, he doesn't get off, in my book. TRAINING should have told him to go to the fricken front door and knock on it, identify himself, and talk to her.
She's dead because she left her door open. Was it a cooler night? Maybe she wanted to take advantage of that. Maybe she doesn't have a/c, like another poster said, and wanted to cool the house down. It doesn't matter, it's her door, she can leave it open if she wants, that does not give a cop the right to go prowling around her house, unannounced, and then firing on her when (IF) she had a gun in her hand.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ClaraC
I disagree. You pull your weapon in case you might need to use it, and you don't put your finger on the trigger until it's necessary to shoot.
Or anyway, that's what I've learned today. You need to pull your weapon in case, but you don't place your finger on the trigger until the moment.
Wrong. You do not pull a weapon on someone unless you intend to shoot them. That gets ingrained into anyone who ever takes a course - no matter where that course is. You don't pull a weapon "just in case", you only pull it if you're going to shoot it, and you know, when you pull it, that you can very well kill someone. That's why you don't do a "just in case" pull of your weapon. You know, the moment you aim a weapon at someone, in short order, you could be ending someone's life.
Last edited by Three Wolves In Snow; 10-15-2019 at 12:45 AM..
And the tax payers will have to foot the bill for the lawsuit. Law enforcement needs to have their own private insurance.
Private police using private insurance under private resolution councils. Voila!
And the brainwashed morons who call government goons on their neighbors for having their door open disappears.
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