He should be convicted of manslaughter but you never know in this country. My gut feeling is that he will serve more time than Guyger but I've been disappointed before.
Was there some news about this officer being a white supramacist that I missed? The rate at which their doors are reported open is also much higher.
Surprised to see you say that. I think this incident looks more like murder than even the Guyger encounter. You never know how it'll shake out in court, but at the moment it really looks like they'll get a conviction on something. Being disowned by the PD so quickly for not following procedure really hurts his defense, I'd think.
Oh it's definitely murder but I highly doubt that a police officer (yes I know he resigned) will be convicted of murder.
You sign up to have people looking at your Facebook when you sign up for Facebook. The idea that social media should be private is just bizarre to me. It's called SOCIAL MEDIA for a reason.
Again, dishonest/ignorant. Do middle class blacks commit crime at a much higher rate than middle class whites?
And most of these incidents dont involve them You're dishonest. Im talking about criminals On a sidenote . so tired of the sensitivity discussing black crime with educated blacks. First response is im educated im not a criminal. We aren't talking about you
The last DFW cop to kill someone in their own home was convicted by a jury for murder even though they could have gone with manslaughter. I understand being afraid to hope that lightning will strike the same place twice, but I also don't think you should compromise on justice prematurely. Looks to me like he intentionally fired and has no mitigating circumstance that allows him to claim self-defense. Murder convictions don't help dirty cops' dead victims. But, you are right that being white isn't a blanket insulation. Besides these 2 black people shot in their own homes for no good reason, we've also had in Texas another case of white people being framed by a cop for dealing drugs and then killed in a no-knock drug raid. That one will probably also garner a murder conviction, but that couple is still dead. To @Ubiquitin's point, it probably would have helped that lady a lot to have a shiny white face gleaming at the cop through the window instead of a dark one. But cops are killing way too many people of all skin colors. It might not have been racial, but what Goines did was at least as ugly.
@JuanValdez I would not disagree that Botham and this victim being black plays a factor.. Irs not an issue of corruption or procedure as much as recruitment imo
It was definitely intentional but it wouldn't be the first time a police officer intentionally killed a black person and went home. My faith in this justice system is pretty much non-existent.
Agreed. But that doesn't mean people who saw it before you scribbed it aren't allowed to have an opinion on it.
They may help prevent future murders. If cops walk around with a bit more fear of a murder case when on duty, they mike think twice before wrongfully blasting someone away. I think cops historic ability to get off scotch free in the past has encouraged the shoot first deal with it later mentality a lot.
Cometswin has a problem with Guyger's name not being released immediately. I dont have a problem with that giving a few days for a initial investigation. He's steady b****ing about his imagined corruption. They are police officers and should be assumed innocent just like the rest of us I guess there is an argument she should have been taken into custody but in the end it had no bearing on the case
Last week I was reading a study that showed what really slowed down police shootings wasn't more training or even unconscious bias training, it was jurisdictions that were more aggressive in charging police. I wish I could find it.
Absolutely. I say it only because of pgabs' implication that shooting innocent people in their homes shouldn't count when we look at police brutality because those cops were indicted. It's great they were indicted, but I want PDs to address the problems of police brutality before citizens are killed.
In our community I think that feel is very prevalent. We have reached the point that we view cops like wild animals Don't make Eye contact Don't make any sudden movements most times you probably be able to survive unmolested but There is a very real change they will attach with minimal provocation. Rocket River
No slurs, profanity, discriminatory language — or even personal insults Actual policy: “Employees are prohibited from using ethnic slurs, profanity, personal insults; material that is harassing, defamatory, fraudulent, or discriminatory, or other content or communications that would not be acceptable in a City workplace under City or agency policy or practice.” Was it violated? This is the most glaring of the possible policy violations by officers cited in the Facebook post database. The language of the directive — which could basically encompass anything from curse words to racial epithets — covers a broad range of activity. Another example. The department’s social media policy, created in 2014, says officers "are free to express themselves as private citizens on social media sites" as long as it doesn't "impair working relationships of the department, impede the performance of their duties, impair discipline and harmony among co-workers, or negatively affect the public perception of the department."