- #71
zoobyshoe
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Jimmy Snyder said:Did this incident actually take place? I can't find any news story about it.
See post #1 and post #5.
Jimmy Snyder said:Did this incident actually take place? I can't find any news story about it.
As I noted in a previous post the primary purpose of laws regulating the operation of a bicycle on the streets is for the safety of the cyclist. The primary purpose for speeding laws is the safety of everyone involved.Hurkyl said:I can't fathom the point of this comment.
Are you still harping on that? Tasing first was just a mistake on my part regarding rules of engagement. It's a hypothetical scenario, modify it -- put in some struggling before the taser was used, or even ignore the struggle all together. Your comments have made it sound like you would even condemn the cop simply for running down the kid. (unless I'm mixing you up with someone else)
Lots of people do.TheStatutoryApe said:If the kid gets away who cares?
You're asking yourself the wrong question -- you're omitting a ton of relevant contextual information.Again, its a matter of tactics in proportion to the initial event. If I wanted to I could imagine a chain of events that could theoretically justify an officer shooting and killing the kid but we need to ask ourselves (and the officers should have asked themselves) is this a justifiable end result starting with a kid stopped on his bicycle for a traffic violation?
Agreed. But it's also clear the article is particularly lacking in interesting information. It's would be foolish to form anything but a superficial opinion from the information provided.As I noted in earlier posts there would have to be some particularly interesting information left out of the news articles to justify the officers' behavior.
Pamela Ford or Pamela Thompson? Yes, I see what you mean.Hurkyl said:(Are you sure both articles refer to the same event? The names don't seem to match up)
Daytona Daily News said:Finding the front door locked, Kersey turned on Hooper, who had mounted the front porch to issue Kersey a bicycle citation, and began to struggle, according to the police report.
“Kersey started swinging his arms at Officer Hooper and yelling in an unintelligible language,” according to the police report.
Good work Jimmy Snyder. The police side of the story contains the important mitigating information that the kid started swinging first, and that he is a large kid:Jimmy Snyder said:I found another news story that has some more details. The event occurred last year. The woman's name was Thompson at that time and is Ford now (the boy's name is Kersey). Here is an excerpt:
http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/dayton-news/family-sues-city-over-sons-arrest-1198555.html"
According to the police incident report, Hooper first saw the boy, later identified as Kersey, riding his bike the wrong way down on Andrews Street.
When Kersey spotted the police cruiser, he started riding on the sidewalk.
When Hooper yelled for Kersey to stop, the boy took off up St. Paul Avenue, dumping his bike in front of his house.
Finding the front door locked, Kersey turned on Hooper, who had mounted the front porch to issue Kersey a bicycle citation, and began to struggle, according to the police report.
“Kersey started swinging his arms at Officer Hooper and yelling in an unintelligible language,” according to the police report.
An attempt to Tase the struggling boy, who was described as 6-foot-1 and 160 pounds, was unsuccessful.
Kersey’s mother opened the door and pulled her son in, at which point Hopper fired his Taser, hitting the 17-year-old in the back. The mother pulled out one of the probes, and Kersey fled through the house to the kitchen.
Hooper attempted to take control of Kersey, but had to fight off his mother and later a family friend. It turned into a donnybrook in the kitchen as Hopper and Officer Howard, who arrived as backup, struggled to subdue Kersey, while keeping the mother and family friend out of the fray.
All of this over a kid riding his bicycle. God forbid the kid was vandalizing property, setting fire to pets, etc...zoobyshoe said:Good work Jimmy Snyder. The police side of the story contains the important mitigating information that the kid started swinging first, and that he is a large kid:
zoobyshoe said:Good work Jimmy Snyder. The police side of the story contains the important mitigating information that the kid started swinging first, and that he is a large kid:
Evo said:All of this over a kid riding his bicycle. God forbid the kid was vandalizing property, setting fire to pets, etc...
I'm sorry, this was a ridiculous misuse of police force, and just really bad judgement on the policeman's part. And I'm always able to find a reason to supprt the police, I just can't on this one.
All I said was "mitigating". Not "exonerating". I can see where the kid's behavior would cause the cop to jump to a whole other level of alert.Jack21222 said:1st: 6'1", 160 pounds is NOT a large kid. That's a scrawny kid.
2nd: The taser was used AFTER the kid was no longer swinging, and was in fact being pulled in by his mother. He was tasered in the back.
3rd: The officers continued to escalate the violence beyond where it was necessary. The kid didn't NEED to be restrained as he was fleeing. He just needed to be issued a citation.
4th: I have secondhand experience of police officers outright lying on police reports. It happened to family members of mine on more than one occasion. I have reason to doubt their story.
Why? Officers let people go on minor violations all the time. Criminals get away all the time. What's so important about a kid on a bike getting a traffic ticket?Hurkyl said:Lots of people do.
No I am not. The only mitigating factor should be whether or not the officers or anyone else was in immediate threat of harm. It is also important whether such a situation is created by the officers actions. According to the article found by Jimmy it appears that they cornered him and he lashed out. They could have backed off and deescalated the situation. They certainly needed to back up and get room to use a tazer which was apparently fired into his back after his mom had opened the door and the kid was retreating inside.You're asking yourself the wrong question -- you're omitting a ton of relevant contextual information.
The bare facts are still the bare facts. Unless the officers were seriously in danger that they could not extricate themselves from, a possibility but not one that seems supported by any of the stories, then there was no reason to escalate the situation to the degree that has been reported.Agreed. But it's also clear the article is particularly lacking in interesting information. It's would be foolish to form anything but a superficial opinion from the information provided.
You contradict yourself. You say that you are not omitting any relevant contextual information, and then you claim that some omitted contextual information is actually relevant.TheStatutoryApe said:No I am not. The only mitigating factor should be whether or not the officers or anyone else was in immediate threat of harm.
And yet more relevant contextual information.It is also important whether such a situation is created by the officers actions.
Since this (seems to be made) in reply to my challenge to your comment that we should be asking "is this a justifiable end result starting with a kid stopped on his bicycle for a traffic violation?", I'll reply to this.According to the article found by Jimmy it appears that they cornered him and he lashed out. They could have backed off and deescalated the situation. They certainly needed to back up and get room to use a tazer which was apparently fired into his back after his mom had opened the door and the kid was retreating inside.
Sure, but someone forming an opinion based on the article in post #1 clearly does not have the bare facts.The bare facts are still the bare facts.