parklane1
Tony Galvin
Seriously who cares, its one less gangster **** on the streets, absolute zero loss to the planet
Could not agree more.
Seriously who cares, its one less gangster **** on the streets, absolute zero loss to the planet
Comments like these probably put you pretty high up in the zero value to the planet ranks. Very insensitive.
People are terrible eyewitnesses. It's been shown again and again that personal bias plays a massive role in what people 'remember'
People are terrible eyewitnesses. It's been shown again and again that personal bias plays a massive role in what people 'remember'
Something else which has been proven time and time again is that people are less likely to report crimes they've seen if they perceive a hostile approach by a police force operating a zero tolerance policy.
I didn't know that. Do you have any links to data?
Also, I'd be interested to know how exactly a "zero tolerance policy" presents itself in the eyes of a layman, and why someone not commiting any crimes should be concerned with such a policy.
You are choosing to purposely view matters from a narrow perspective. Look, no-one who's a law abiding citizen should ever be concerned by the efforts of law enforcement to enforce said-laws, but we all know that sometimes, that isn't enough to prevent massive wrongs in the criminal justice system. Can you at least acknowledge that fact? Because it is a fact!
Rarely people are wrongfully arrested, yes. And even more rarely they're wrongfully convicted.
I'm not sure of the relevance to giving an honest and accurate witness statement though. Unless you're suggesting that people are working on the assumption that the police are in the wrong to begin with? In that case, their statement will, as I alluded to in an earlier post, likely be factually flawed due to their inherent bias.
Meanwhile, in LA…
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-kelly-thomas-verdict-fbi-to-examine-trial-evidence-20140113,0,4049891.story#axzz2qLwTRy1m
Just to clarify, you can now stop and question a homeless schizophrenic men in bus depots and two of you can beat him to death because he might've been 'fighting'…such little tiny fellas they are too, those fine law enforcement officers…
Seriously, that is little more than an opinion piece - is that what passes for reporting over there?
I don't know enough about the case to say who is in the right/wrong, but all that story tells me is that the FBI are looking to see if there's anything worth looking at.
There's a video of the whole incident online.
Which is described by an article attempting to paint the police as being in the wrong as grainy. I believe it was also shown to a jury who chose not to find the police guilty.
A lot of what you say is very very hard to disagree with, indeed, I don't.
I think perhaps you've missed the point of my opinion at any rate, which is shooting people dead because you 'think' they were a threat is poor. Again, no FACTS exist, either with DNA evidence or eye-witnesses, to place a gun as having come from Duggan's hand out of the mini-cab. That is a FACT. And as you quite rightly say, the FACTS are always very important. Thus the FACT is the bloke was shot on 'suspicion' of having a gun despite the fact he did not have one and that no-one had seen a gun being thrown from a vehicle, let alone suggested that it looked like Duggan was reaching for one when shot.
No, let's be honest, this entire case is about reputations and history. Not 'facts'. It's about those grey areas of supposition and reputation. I have no doubt Duggan was not going to win any philanthropic prizes, but I also have no doubt he did not have a gun on him when he was shot. And that, to me, is the problem. Because Dorothy, can we not agree that NO-ONE should be shot on 'reputation' without some hard evidence?
This case has been examined by a jury, presumably not made up of coppers, and they've decided it wasn't unlawful? Is that really a cover up?Covering for dodgy work helps no-one in any field, and covering for dodgy colleagues helps even fewer.