wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
- Posts
- 25,965
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It will be very interesting to see what happens in that regardOK, there is a little self interest in it as well.
I hate to see ourselves including myself in lockdown and restrictions again. So the comment about the fear of spiking virus infections... undoing all the good we've done to bring it under control.
It will highlight some pretty self righteous, self indulgent behaviour, but that is todays Australia.It will be very interesting to see what happens in that regard
You'd think so wouldn't ya ? I don't have any stats or anything but it's very hard to keep a social distance in a cruise ship or in economy class on a plane.But in reality is there any greater chance of contracting the desease on a ship or a plane?
Just a thought.
The police officer resigned and the City of Boulder agreed to settle all claims made by the student.
The independent review confirmed violations of BPD Rules 5 and 8, namely that the officer took actions which he "… reasonably should know is not in accordance with the law;” and, he failed to “use reasonable judgment and refrain from conduct which reflects unfavorably on the department,” thereby causing embarrassment to the department, compromising its reputation and impairing its credibility.
In plain English all his actions were determined to be unlawful.
You might ask how an officer with 15 years experience could get it so wrong. The answer lies in police statistics which do not lie.
So where is the link to the 'Independent Review'. Or attach it to your post. Either/or works for me.
jog on
duc
use reasonable judgment and refrain from conduct which reflects unfavorably on the department,”
Isn't it terrible?.it means this week any police arresting ANY person of colour would be sackable
Murderer and rioter included
Good on him.As usual (with these types of inquiries) the devil is in the detail.
The Officer's lawyer negotiated a settlement with the city. Now, if the Officer had been culpable pursuant to Regulations 5 and 8 and it was clearly proven, it is likely that no such settlement would have taken place. Rather (as per department policy) simply a disciplinary process would have been implemented. This could have resulted in his dismissal.
That he resigned with an undisclosed settlement indicates all is not as it seems. The clues are contained within the Review.
jog on
duc
At no point did you explain how the officer could have acted reasonably, nor in accordance with law. The BPD's Professional Standards Unit determined that he did neither.That he resigned with an undisclosed settlement indicates all is not as it seems. The clues are contained within the Review.
1. At no point did you explain how the officer could have acted reasonably, nor in accordance with law.
2. The BPD's Professional Standards Unit determined that he did neither.
3. You appear to believe you knew better but consistently could not offer reasons. Logic is about reasoning.
4. A reasonable perspective is also "objective" and the PSU determined that an objective viewer would have seen in the first few minutes that the officer misjudged reasonable suspicion. I noted your drawn-out ramblings which failed in that regard.
The BPD PSU has a grasp of law which you consistently failed to understand, and still seem to want to insist you know better.1. I could simply repost previously posted law, evidence, etc. and thereby disprove your assertion. However clearly a waste of time as you simply choose to ignore the facts placed in front of you. That's fine, people will judge for themselves the value contained in 'your opinion'.
1. The BPD PSU has a grasp of law which you consistently failed to understand, and still seem to want to insist you know better.
2. You are accomplished at misunderstanding the blindingly obvious.
3. Furthermore, I never ventured my "opinion," and what you or anyone else chooses to believe is not relevant to me. I commented principally on what constituted reasonable and lawful actions.
4. To put an end to the type of behaviours that are symptomatic of racism we need to address the causes and ensure that inappropriate law enforcement practices such as those used against George Floyd are forbidden. Let's hope the protests in America gain traction in those regards.
AEI environmental systems...But in reality is there any greater chance of contracting the desease on a ship or a plane?
Just a thought.
Yes , but what I'm getting at, it is just another example of conditioned response.You'd think so wouldn't ya ? I don't have any stats or anything but it's very hard to keep a social distance in a cruise ship or in economy class on a plane.
So black people are born bad and so cops are conditioned to kill them. Just my opinion.Yes , but what I'm getting at, it is just another example of conditioned response.
I think a lot of the blame is being attributed on the wrong cause, the blame is being directed based on colour discrimination, when in fact I think a lot can be attributed to high incidence of black representation in crime related incidences.
This in turn causes a conditioned response by police, if the crime rate attributed to blacks dropped, I'm sure the reaction of the public and police would change, only my opinion.
But while you have the police being attacked by a sector of society, that sector will always be dealt with differently, human nature.
Just my opinion.
That is going from the sublime, to the ridiculous, but to be expected.So black people are born bad and so cops are conditioned to kill them. Just my opinion.
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