So there goes your theory of Animals acting appropriately when it is a justified shooting. Still gathering, vandalizing and throwing bricks at cops after they shot a Savage that pointed a gun at them. Just goes to show Savages will riot and act a fool whether an armed person gets killed or an unarmed who is still a danger gets killed.
So there goes your theory of Animals acting appropriately when it is a justified shooting. Still gathering, vandalizing and throwing bricks at cops after they shot a Savage that pointed a gun at them. Just goes to show Savages will riot and act a fool whether an armed person gets killed or an unarmed who is still a danger gets killed.
So there goes your theory of Animals acting appropriately when it is a justified shooting. Still gathering, vandalizing and throwing bricks at cops after they shot a Savage that pointed a gun at them. Just goes to show Savages will riot and act a fool whether an armed person gets killed or an unarmed who is still a danger gets killed.
So there goes your theory of Animals acting appropriately when it is a justified shooting. Still gathering, vandalizing and throwing bricks at cops after they shot a Savage that pointed a gun at them. Just goes to show Savages will riot and act a fool whether an armed person gets killed or an unarmed who is still a danger gets killed.
Well, if they don't pull the trigger ..what's the harm ? ( sarc)
Well, if they don't pull the trigger ..what's the harm ? ( sarc)
Dottie Davis, a former police officer in Indiana, had an insider’s view of why stopping domestic violence in police households can be so difficult.
When Ms. Davis reported that her domestic partner, also a police officer, had violently attacked her, she said she realized quickly that the responding officers would do little or nothing to protect her.
“They worked with him, and he stood up and shook both their hands and began to apologize immediately, and so I knew right then that not much was going to be done,” said Ms. Davis, who retired recently as deputy police chief in Fort Wayne after 32 years on the force. Once her abuser assured the officers that he would take care of her injuries, she said, they agreed not to report the incident and said they would “swear the dispatchers to secrecy.”
Ms. Davis said that when she admitted being battered, “I was ostracized by my co-workers because you don’t rat on another cop.” She added, “Even though his behavior was criminal and we were arresting other people for it, because he was a police officer, he was exempted.”
Staying silent in the hope that the abuse stops is rarely a good option because the attacks, without some type of intervention, will usually continue, experts say. But the alternative carries its own set of risks.
“A victim calls 911 — well, guess what? Their statement is right on the screen for every fellow officer and every friend of that officer to read and to make a call and let him know what she just told the dispatcher,” said Ms. Davis, now the head of security for the Fort Wayne schools. In addition, abusive officers can use police computer systems to track their victims.
Because domestic violence victims might fear calling 911 to report an officer, the model rules urge police departments to designate a contact person so families can bypass officers who may work with the offending officer. But most of the largest police agencies in the country offer no such help on their website or through outreach programs, the Times/“Frontline” survey has found.
Dottie Davis, a former police officer in Indiana, had an insider’s view of why stopping domestic violence in police households can be so difficult.
When Ms. Davis reported that her domestic partner, also a police officer, had violently attacked her, she said she realized quickly that the responding officers would do little or nothing to protect her.
“They worked with him, and he stood up and shook both their hands and began to apologize immediately, and so I knew right then that not much was going to be done,” said Ms. Davis, who retired recently as deputy police chief in Fort Wayne after 32 years on the force. Once her abuser assured the officers that he would take care of her injuries, she said, they agreed not to report the incident and said they would “swear the dispatchers to secrecy.”
Ms. Davis said that when she admitted being battered, “I was ostracized by my co-workers because you don’t rat on another cop.” She added, “Even though his behavior was criminal and we were arresting other people for it, because he was a police officer, he was exempted.”
Staying silent in the hope that the abuse stops is rarely a good option because the attacks, without some type of intervention, will usually continue, experts say. But the alternative carries its own set of risks.
“A victim calls 911 — well, guess what? Their statement is right on the screen for every fellow officer and every friend of that officer to read and to make a call and let him know what she just told the dispatcher,” said Ms. Davis, now the head of security for the Fort Wayne schools. In addition, abusive officers can use police computer systems to track their victims.
Because domestic violence victims might fear calling 911 to report an officer, the model rules urge police departments to designate a contact person so families can bypass officers who may work with the offending officer. But most of the largest police agencies in the country offer no such help on their website or through outreach programs, the Times/“Frontline” survey has found.
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