The warrant didn't list them seizing any guns. It will be interesting to hear why they shot him.
12/7/2006 1:09:01 PM
12/7/2006 1:24:36 PM
12/7/2006 1:42:15 PM
12/7/2006 2:01:30 PM
this thread seems like a whole bunch of worrying for no reasoni dont do anything illegal so i dont have anything to worry about
12/7/2006 2:05:57 PM
^^ agreeI have no problem with LEOs doing what they to do to protect themselves, there are people that would kill them just because they wear a uniform...but, the problem is, thats a small percentage of the population I know how you're trained, everyone is a potential threat and all thatbut like I said, discretion, use it
12/7/2006 3:33:59 PM
^so the website itself isn't a problem? i thought you said earlier that the thread wasn't about the incident itself, but the website.
12/7/2006 3:36:14 PM
are you going to add to the thread or just try and troll me?the thread was not about the "incident", but was moreso about the use of websites like that to acquire evidence that could lead to incidents like this againthey found a myspace photo of him holding a gun, dude doesn't even own a gun, but they show up gung ho like the dude was hiding osama and capped him in the headso yeah, when a website is used to determine something that has to deal with life or death, I say I have a problem with it being the ONLY source of infoand like I said, I also have a problem with the potential for abuse by LEOs concerning things that happen outside of their job
12/7/2006 3:41:31 PM
12/7/2006 3:48:30 PM
I don't, but apparently it was enough to bring out the heavy shit I find it laughable that if this had nothing to do with guns, and was about something like pot, you probably would be all up in arms about rights and victims and all that other feel good shitweren't the liberals all fired up about the information that the government could access concerning the patriot act and privacy and all that stuff?or was it because apparently suspected terrorists deserve better treatment than a college kid that did something really dumb?
12/7/2006 3:54:34 PM
12/7/2006 4:05:48 PM
12/7/2006 4:08:20 PM
12/7/2006 4:17:54 PM
12/7/2006 4:23:59 PM
12/7/2006 5:54:42 PM
once again you miss the point of this.
12/7/2006 6:39:04 PM
12/7/2006 6:57:58 PM
12/7/2006 7:22:10 PM
12/7/2006 9:16:07 PM
I just figured that with the array of nonlethal weapons they have at their disposal, the tendency would be to incapacitate, but if that's not the case, fine, just run with the first part of my statement.The only problem I have with anything the police did is that they shot a guy who, by all appearances, didn't need shooting.
12/7/2006 9:47:41 PM
Yeah, the outrage over using the Internet I don't get at all. Just because it's not printed on photo paper doesn't mean the Internets is fantasy land where nothing is real. The photos don't justify the force used but they do justify precautions and procedures when they showed up at the dude's place.Photos of suspects being armed are a perfectly viable reason to think that the suspects might be armed.But there is plenty to worry about in this case, like why they apparently shot him through the freaking door. Obviously there is not a legit procedure in place that explains that.
12/7/2006 11:56:24 PM
Cops looking at pictures of you being a dumbass on the internet don't have a right to then take the precautions neccessary to ensure their saftey since they have public information that you yourself provided to the world?This is no different than if the cops came to your house to investigate you, saw that you had guns on a bookshelf near your un-curtained window, and decided to take more precaution because of that.YouProvidedThisInformationForAnyone(IncludingCops)ToSeeQQ more
12/8/2006 1:22:55 AM
12/8/2006 2:42:36 AM
The issue clearly isn't the internet capability, it's bad cops. The internet didn't change that. This is a malformed thread.
12/8/2006 6:35:21 AM
12/9/2006 1:26:00 AM
12/9/2006 2:14:00 AM
Saying cops shoot to kill isn't quite correct. They shoot to stop. This generally requires serious wounds, but handguns rounds are far from universally fatal.
12/9/2006 10:52:28 PM
Whether or not the rounds prove fatal is irrelevant though. What matters is the intent is to kill, which is why the discharging of a firearm, regardless of purpose is considered deadly force.
12/10/2006 1:24:49 PM
I still say the intent is to stop, not to kill. As you say, whether the rounds are eventually fatal doesn't matter. It's deadly force because it does have a fair chance of killing.
12/10/2006 3:52:33 PM
^^ I think he's talking about within the context of the lawI left this thread alone because after reading more on the case, I've determined that the officers were right in using what information they had in assuming that he could be violent I still feel however, that the cops fucked up, as his firing showsand that this kid was a bad kid and he might have deserved street justice for what all he had done, but it's not a LEOs place to dispense street justiceas for the site, I'm still iffy on being able justify swat teams because of internet pictures and banterbut, in this case, I understnad why they brought out heavier stuff (past record etc etc)
12/10/2006 3:56:28 PM
Either way, shooting to disable is a pretty silly idea. Cops can barely hit anything as it is, aiming for the center mass. With rifles, cops have sometimes tried the shoot to disable thing, but, IIRC, it has a checkered history.
12/10/2006 4:03:18 PM
12/11/2006 4:37:45 PM