Police Officers At A Tactical Disadvantage Bravely Tase 87-Year-Old Woman Into Submission

from the when-u-gain-the-high-ground-just-by-showing-up dept

No police department should ever have to explain why they tased an 87-year-old woman. It's not that the public doesn't deserve an explanation. It's that there is seldom any reason to deploy force against 5'2" 87-year-old. But that's what Chatsworth Police Chief Josh Etheridge had to do after one of his officers tased the woman during a "confrontation" behind the local Boys and Girls Club.

The police chief of a small Georgia town is defending an officer who deployed a stun gun on a "smiling" 87-year-old woman, saying she refused to comply with numerous commands to put down a kitchen knife she was using to cut dandelions.

Perhaps we civilians just don't appreciate the danger presented by a smiling 87-year-old woman -- in this case, Martha al-Bishara, who lived across the street from the Boys and Girls Club. I mean, she was carrying a kitchen knife and "refused" to put it down. If we could just see the recordings…

He said there is police body-camera footage of the incident, but he has yet to release it because charges against al-Bishara are pending.

Oh.

Because we civilians probably can't imagine a situation where we might have to use a stun gun against an octogenarian, here's some helpful statements by the PD to help us visualize how a 5'2" 87-year-old got the drop on responding officers.

"We were able to contain her to the back area. She was in an elevated position above both myself and the other officer that was there on scene. She did have a knife in her right hand."

I understand the only way out of this debacle is going straight through it, but it's astounding the chief is actually trying to present this as a dynamic situation in which officers were at a tactical disadvantage. It was two (2) officers against a 5'2" 87-year-old woman who didn't speak English. It seems they could have regained the high ground by walking at a normal rate of speed around her. And if it looked like she might charge them, they could have walked slightly faster. (And it's your own damn fault you "contained" her on the high ground.)

But we're supposed to be grateful she was only tased. Chief Etheridge twice suggests she could have been shot. First, she might have been "accidentally" shot because an officer might have pulled a gun for god knows what reason…

Etheridge said he realizes that some people might ask why the officer didn't just retreat. But he said had the officer backed up down the sloping terrain, he could have fallen and accidentally shot the woman.

Go ahead and click through to view the gently sloping terrain for yourself. I guess this explanation is plausible. But that doesn't make it any less stupid. And the only plausible part is the "accidental" part. As we know, officers never shoot citizens. Their weapons "discharge" magically and fill citizens with bullet wounds. The only way an officer could "fall" and "accidentally" shoot someone is if the officer already has a gun out and pointing at the person. This is Chief Etheridge admitting he would have escalated to deadly force to "resolve" the situation.

Second, if the elderly woman had changed her grip on her kitchen knife in any way during the incident, she'd probably be dead right now.

"Lord help us if she had tried to stop the officer and held the knife in an aggressive manner, and then deadly force would have been used."

There are many problems with this statement, including the fact that "aggressive manner" is in the eye of the gun-wielding, badge-wearing beholder, but here's just one of them: for many people, knives are tools, not weapons. Its police officers who insist every tool is a weapon that keep situations like these from being de-escalated.

When an 87-year-old walks down a hill towards officers carrying a kitchen knife, she's not taking advantage of the high ground to overpower officers. She just wants to know why cops are yelling and pointing weapons at her. But these cops didn't want to know what she was doing. They just wanted her to stop walking around with a knife. So they tased her. And then they charged her. Here's one final detail from the story which indicates how little these officers actually care about the people they serve.

The grandmother was arrested on suspicion of misdemeanor criminal trespass and obstruction of an officer and held at the police station for about three hours, Douhne said. Police refused to allow his mother and sister to interpret for al-Bishara while she was being booked and having her mugshot taken.

At the end of the day, I guess we're supposed to be grateful officers showed up, took control of the situation, and got this 87-year-old miscreant off the street, if only for a few hours. I'm sure we'll see these same defensive statements again in the eventual civil rights lawsuit. When that happens, the cops will have to convince an actual court the force deployment wasn't excessive. Unfortunately for this woman, that court is far more easily persuaded than the court of public opinion.

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Filed Under: martha al-bishara, police, police brutality, tasers


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  • icon
    Anonymous Anonymous Coward (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 1:58pm

    Look out police, that is only your shadow

    She was gathering dandelions. I took a look at that picture, and am having a hard time seeing someone 87 years old hopping that fence, or breaking open a gate which is not shown. While the property was owned by a club, it was vacant, with an apparently open gate, or a break in the fence. A vacant lot and the club called the police because they felt threatened by an 87 year old lady?

    Why dandelions? There is an explaination for that at the end of this post at Appellate Squawk.

    She doesn't speak English, so they try Spanish. That doesn't work because she is Greek. Then they refused to allow her family to translate (one presumes both from and to her) at the police station.

    I sure hope these cops don't run into anything that is actually life threatening, one can only guess what their reaction might be, but you can be sure shots will be fired.

    Maybe Chief Etheridge should take that class in Tulsa. He could learn a thing or two about victimization.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      ECA (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 4:05pm

      Re: Look out police, that is only your shadow

      How much land does the Club own...if she was outside the fence there is NO TRESPASS..
      It would have been nice to hold a hand out to see if she would take it and allow them to take her home..
      BUT, a police officer job is only to arrest.

      What are the odds the Club had seen her before??

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Atkray (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 5:05pm

      Re: Look out police, that is only your shadow

      Once again showing us you only call the police if you want someone killed.

      Calling 911 == swatting someone.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Max (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 3:52pm

    https://youtu.be/Te1UE29oitE?t=3m56s

    "- I can't believe you stabbed me...!"
    "- BRAVELY stabbed you!"

    Classic...

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Zgaidin (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 4:09pm

    As someone who lived several years in this part of the country, I wish I could say this is worse than anything I ever personally witnessed the cops do. Sadly, I can't honestly make that claim.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    JoeCool (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 4:57pm

    What the hell kind of training do cops get these days?

    "Lord help us if she had tried to stop the officer and held the knife in an aggressive manner, and then deadly force would have been used."

    Soooo - she wasn't holding it in an aggressive manner, and not trying to stop the police. So exactly why was she tased again?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Pixelation, 13 Sep 2018 @ 6:06pm

      Re: What the hell kind of training do cops get these days?

      Because the wilting daisies were worried they might get collected along with the dandelions.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      PaulT (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 1:28am

      Re: What the hell kind of training do cops get these days?

      The same reason as with every similar story - they have toys and they want to play with them.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      David, 14 Sep 2018 @ 2:29am

      Re: What the hell kind of training do cops get these days?

      Pay attention. She was a 87-year old Greek, not a 87-year old U.S. cop. She likely had the drop in agility on both cops. She could have run circles around them until they puked donuts, then stabbed them from behind and hidden the corpses under dandelions before backup arrived.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        JoeCool (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 6:55am

        Re: Re: What the hell kind of training do cops get these days?

        So when is the ticker-tape parade for these Heroes of Humanity? I suppose the Mayor will give them the key to the city for taking down this cold, vicious, killer of flowers without resorting to 60+ bullets. They should at least get a medal and a raise.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 10:23am

        Re: Re: What the hell kind of training do cops get these days?

        For all the cops know, she could've been an expert knife-thrower. 87-year-olds have the free time to pick up skills like that.

        Given the state of US policing she's lucky to have survived.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 13 Sep 2018 @ 5:29pm

    al-Bishara

    Enough said?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 13 Sep 2018 @ 6:16pm

    Ulterior motive?

    Maybe the cops wanted to take (civil asset forfeiture) those tasty dandelions she had cut? Getting to tazer an old lady was just bonus.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 13 Sep 2018 @ 6:38pm

    Ladies and gentlemen, presenting... out_of_the_blue's heroes!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 13 Sep 2018 @ 6:50pm

    How about some Rules of Engagement?

    These trigger happy cops keep thinking they're in combat but they aren't given any limitations. This would be a basis for a War Crime.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 13 Sep 2018 @ 7:16pm

      Re: How about some Rules of Engagement?

      _These trigger happy cops keep thinking they're in combat but they aren't given any limitations. This would be a basis for a War Crime._

      I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you aren't a native english speaker because the only alternative is you are a nutter, mate. Cheers.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 13 Sep 2018 @ 7:40pm

        Re: Re: How about some Rules of Engagement?

        I'm sorry, I can't extend the same courtesy to a cop apologist sociopath.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Uriel-238 (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 8:16pm

      War crimes by peacekeepers.

      Suggesting the police commit war crimes would not really be saying much. Given the difference in operating policies between law-enforcement and warfighters, rules of engagement for one don't generally work for the other.

      For instance, soldiers are supposed to use solid-slug ammunition (typically FMJ rounds) when fighting against infantry or common military units. The use of hollowpoint rounds is considered cruel to unarmed human targets, and would be regarded as a war crime.

      On the other hand, Law enforcement typically use hollowpoint or glazier rounds because they reduce penetration of missed shots. This is typically an advantage when shooting in an occupied municipal area, where an assault rifle shooting FMJ rounds could penetrate eleven homes. (We tested!)

      It's entirely true that the US law enforcement services have been becoming more militarized, gaining military equipment from the department of defense, and choosing military standards (such as subdued insignia where police units should be easily identifiable as law enforcement agents of state)

      It's entirely true that US law enforcement agencies now act as if they are separate from the populations they are supposed to serve, in contrast to the Peelian principles they are trained to uphold. They are now a separate caste to whom different rules of law apply.

      And it's entirely true that US law enforcement agencies engage in a lot of crimes against humanity, resorting quickly and preemptively to the use of force, and using force disproportionately to the threats they face. They also torture or otherwise coerce to gain confessions or otherwise extract evidence, and this is before we get into common misconduct such as lying in testimony, planting evidence,exceeding forth-amendment protections against illegal search and seizure, resorting to SWAT tactics, using trick-pony dogs and false forensic tools to as evidence and so on.

      But peacekeeping and law enforcement duties operate according to entirely different rules of engagement and as such resorting to methods that would be regarded in warfare as war crimes is ordinary.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Bluegrass Geek (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:14am

        Re: War crimes by peacekeepers.

        But peacekeeping and law enforcement duties operate according to entirely different rules of engagement and as such resorting to methods that would be regarded in warfare as war crimes is ordinary.

        I think the point is that it shouldn't be considered ordinary. The fact we do consider it ordinary is disturbing. Hence the call for at least some form of Rules of Engagement for law enforcement. Maybe not the same ones as our military, but something to move us away from this constant barrage of police misconduct we're experiencing right now.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 9:17am

          Re: Re: War crimes by peacekeepers.

          "The fact we do consider it ordinary is disturbing."

          It is literally how it all works.

          They oppress you until you speak out... then they wait... you get used to it, they oppress you again until you speak out, they wait again. So on and so forth until you don't even realize oppression for what it is. It is just a normal part of your daily life now, and the bonus will be when you get to call everyone telling you that you are welcoming your oppression nutters, or victim blamers, or insert your favorite insult here.

          At the end of the day, the government is a reflection of its people. The few oppress the many because the many do nothing.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    StaticDischarge, 13 Sep 2018 @ 6:56pm

    I'd say those officers need to be tazed themselves...

    Right at their balls (if they even have any), repeatedly, until everyone within a 12 block radius has had two turns tasing both officer's scrotums.

    Then and only then, would they be allowed to whimper home to their mommies.

    Yeah, if this were a perfect world, the Chief would be included as well in this taze-fest.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Uriel-238 (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 6:57pm

    Octigenarian is code for "Ninja Assassin"

    It's one of those things few things know, like the frequency with which ordinary non-white people turn into werewolves.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    wshuff (profile), 13 Sep 2018 @ 9:41pm

    I don't blame the police for being scared. After all, Yoda was shorter than 5'2", was way older than 87, and really didn't speak English that well. Looks at all the damage he could do with a knife made out of light.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    David, 13 Sep 2018 @ 10:06pm

    She could have been wearing a disguise

    Give the officers some leeway. She might have looked like an eighty-something old woman but might have been a twelve-year old in disguise, or a wolf with a laced sleeping cap.

    Better tase than sorry.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    That One Guy (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 12:15am

    Cowards in blue

    87 years old, holding a kitchen knife to cut flowers, against two officers, and the police chief is trying to spin it as though she was lucky she was 'only' tased, rather than killed on the spot, as though she was to blame, not his cowardly, trigger happy goons.

    I'd say cowards like that and the scum defending them need to find new jobs but honestly with a showing like this pretty sure I wouldn't trust them to so much as run a lemonade stand without trying to hospitalize and/or kill someone for 'reaching for a gun!'/their wallet

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      PaulT (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 1:35am

      Re: Cowards in blue

      "she was lucky she was 'only' tased, rather than killed on the spot"

      Actually, she probably is lucky the taser didn't kill her. There's a reason they started calling them "less lethal" rather than "non lethal" weapons.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    cattress (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 2:12am

    If it were my grandmother...

    Did none of these goons have grandmothers, great-aunts, elderly neighbors, or ever enter a grocery store or Ho-jo's any weekday before 2pm? Many, if not most, elderly people are hearing impaired. My Mommom loved NASCAR and when I would pull up in front of her house on Sundays the mirrors of my car would visibly shake from her television inside. And rather than ask someone to repeat what they said a little louder for her, she would pretend she heard what you said and respond with her best guess of what she thought you said- which could be so off and random you couldn't help but laugh.

    If this was my Mommom.... dammit this infuriates me so much, I think I would end up dead confronting them, that is unless they keel over from fright first. If I had the spare cash I would send pallets worth of adult diapers to the police station...

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 9:26am

      Re: If it were my grandmother...

      that is an awesome idea...

      Just attach a note... "These should help with the mess you all make when you shit yourselves the next time a 87 year old lady with a knife shows up!"

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it
    identicon
    Budliky Budliky Kliky Bé, 14 Sep 2018 @ 3:01am

    Sorry, but this is a month old news.

    I know I have read about this mishap sometimes in July or early August. On “alternative-news” website.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      PaulT (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 3:18am

      Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

      Good for you. Should people not care about this woman or the abuse by the police because it happened more a few hours ago?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it
        identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 3:54am

        Re: Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

        A week old is not a month old news. And I really dislike yesteryear’s news. Further, that grandma didn’t speak nor understood any english, being from Syria or some neighboring country. Further, why ACAB fits to most american coppers but not most of european coppers/bobbies is well beyond me...

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • icon
          PaulT (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 4:07am

          Re: Re: Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

          "A week old is not a month old news."

          So?

          "And I really dislike yesteryear’s news"

          So? This site doesn't just cover recent news.

          "Further, that grandma didn’t speak nor understood any english, being from Syria or some neighboring country."

          So... that excuses the behaviour of the officers? Do people now lose their rights and deserve to be given treatment that may kill them just because they don't speak the correct language now?

          "Further, why ACAB fits to most american coppers but not most of european coppers/bobbies is well beyond me..."

          Because they earn the title more than they do? Because officers in those other places are trained to de-escalate situations non-violently, whereas the Americans can't wait to use their weapons on helpless people?

          link to this | view in chronology ]

          • icon
            XcOM987 (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:49am

            Re: Re: Re: Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

            "Further, why ACAB fits to most american coppers but not most of european coppers/bobbies is well beyond me..."

            Because they earn the title more than they do? Because officers in those other places are trained to de-escalate situations non-violently, whereas the Americans can't wait to use their weapons on helpless people?

            Completely agree, had this been in say the UK (And we don't exactly have the best police in the world) this would have been delt with soo much better, the police office wouldn't have even had a weapon drawn, would have approched, attempted to communicate verbally, had that failed they would have tried with hand gestures and approach in a calm and controlled way. they would have only resorted to defence had she attacked the officers, and even then it would be a tazer, they would have just subdued her with physical force (Note, not excessive)

            link to this | view in chronology ]

            • icon
              XcOM987 (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:58am

              Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

              and even then it wouldn't be a tazer,

              link to this | view in chronology ]

            • icon
              PaulT (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 8:09am

              Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

              I know it's hardly the best or most objective way of gathering information, but during those TV programmes that show clips of traffic stops and the like from the US, I was always struck by how quickly the cops escalated situations out of hand. Quite often, the cop seemed to be itching for a fight and almost demanding that the person give them an excuse to use violence. Many, many times there would be opportunities to defuse the situation and leave everyone happy, but instead ended up with physical violence or even shootings.

              Whereas, having grown up in the UK, local cops even having a gun to use in the first place would be an unusual sight, and most situations get resolved without such things. In the other countries I've lived in, the focus seems to be on avoiding a fight, whereas for many in the US it seems to be on causing one.

              link to this | view in chronology ]

              • icon
                Wolfie0827 (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 9:33am

                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

                Very sad but true.

                link to this | view in chronology ]

              • identicon
                Anonymous Coward, 15 Sep 2018 @ 2:43am

                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sorry, but this is a month old news.

                From what I Have seen of US cops, and from occasional experience of UK cops, it is the difference between being trained to be aggressive, and trained to be assertive.

                link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 3:18am

    I was all ready to get angry at some police brutality, but then I read she had a musselim name and didn't speak English. Definitely a sleeper turrist cell. They has the sharingan law in them desert countries, and that's no joke! I have seent them grandmas walk on walls and cast lightening, nothing is more scary than a smiling old musselim woman of a sharingan country, believe it!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      David, 14 Sep 2018 @ 5:11am

      Re:

      You think it funny to leave off the "sarcasm" warnings. That's how things like the "Flat Earth Society" get started. Think of the children. The breathtakingly stupid U.S. children of tomorrow educated in today's public schools striving to reach the level of intelligence expected from tomorrow's presidents.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 8:06am

        Re: Re:

        I think I would be ok with a small conspiratorial group whomst'd've based their beliefs on a lightly Naruto-based shitpost.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 8:32am

        Re: Re:

        They can reach that level of intelligence from watching SpongeBob and Wren and Stimpy....

        It doesn't take much to be President, just look at the Cheeto in Charge...

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    me, 14 Sep 2018 @ 5:30am

    Arrest is too good for these two idiot hick cops

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Jinxed (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 6:12am

    I should point out the police were called thanks to Monsanto, who were upset a civilian was removing weeds without Roundup.

    I had to add a bit of levity against another example of fear mongering destroying common sense as outlined in the article.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 6:35am

    It's over, officers!

    She has the high ground!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 6:36am

    Tasers, when first deployed, were advertised as an alternative to deadly force. To be used in place of deadly force when possible.

    Years later, the taser is being used as a compliance enforcement device, a method of extracting revenge and a tool for torture.

    Meanwhile back at the ranch, LEOs everywhere claim the taser is not being abused and is a vital tool in their arsenal.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:13am

    She was gardening!

    Sheeze, now this is a while new level of dumb. The old lady was gardening. While i use shears, it is perfectly normal to use a knife to prune plants.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      David, 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:56am

      Re: She was gardening!

      So not only was she wielding a knife, but expertly so. Should the officers wait until she had pruned them? She could have sliced them open and splattered all of their two ounzes of brain on the sidewalk before they even noticed.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 8:09am

        Re: Re: She was gardening!

        Two full ounces of brain?

        You're being generous...

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      JoeCool (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 9:48am

      Re: She was gardening!

      A knife also makes a decent trowel. I've used one that way before myself in the garden. One tool to trim plants, dig up weeds, and aerate the soil.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    NeghVar (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 8:42am

    Pacemaker

    If she had a pacemaker, there is a good chance the tase may have killed her.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      David, 14 Sep 2018 @ 9:26am

      Re: Pacemaker

      That's the kind of risk you take when attacking dandelions with a knife. There could have been an electric eel hiding in the grass.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Hero, 14 Sep 2018 @ 9:28am

    > We were able to contain her to the back area. She was in an elevated position above both myself and the other officer that was there on scene.

    It's over, Anakin. I have the high ground!"

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    FrankeeD (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 8:24pm

    Stereotypes vs Actual Behaviour

    Every time I see a movie with one of those stereotypical southern sheriffs, I think to myself, "They're not really like that, right?" And then a story like this pops up and I think maybe they aren't stereotypes.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Uriel-238 (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 9:01pm

      Stereotypes go both ways.

      There was a moment I remember in the premiere of Gotham (S01E01) in which Harvey Bollock, the grizzled cynic of the Bullock / Gordon duo, is lamenting that he killed a guy (who shot at him first) because they learned post hoc the guy was framed.

      Bollock, in the Gotham City PD -- allegedly the most corrupt police department in the United States -- feared for his badge for shooting an armed man who shot at him first. And this was after Ferguson.

      No, the stereotype I know from Hollywood is that the police are -- with clear, mean-looking mustachioed exceptions -- entirely well meaning, they're super cautious, they take protect and serve to heart, and the loose cannons, the bad apples, the cops on the take (mob bribes) are the exceptions. And those guys always get killed in the end.

      In real life, law enforcement is the mob. The bad apples are the sergeants and chiefs. Good guys (what's left of them) have to tread carefully not to get displaced or confined to a desk.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    shelley (profile), 15 Sep 2018 @ 1:11am

    What?

    For what it's worth, the lady is 4ft 10in tall. Her mug shots show her height clearly.
    There were three officers, and as I recall, two had pulled guns, and one had his taser out. They were frightened of retreating because she could have advanced on them quickly and deployed her garden knife (she was more than 5 yards away). She could have disabled the two nearest officers while the third, behind them, was fumbling with his gun.
    How do they train the police in America?
    After tasing the 87 year old lady she was handcuffed and taken to the station, and not given medical attention for more than three hours.
    Tasers are less lethal weapons, not non-lethal weapons, and are not supposed to be used on elderly persons, I thought.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Kimberly Delgado, 15 Sep 2018 @ 9:29am

    Tasing an 87 year old woman holding a kitchen knife is like tasing a two year with a knife. But somehow the pigs would justify that too.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 15 Sep 2018 @ 10:28am

    The PIGS must be chuckling and partying and jumping with joy and high fiving or fist bumping or whatever with glee and congratulating the ones who did this. They probably gave a bonus and award to the one who tased this old woman. They were however just a little surprised and disappointed that she didn't DIE from the tasing.
    They must have categories for handing out these awards, such as:
    Tasing the oldest nonthreatening woman,
    Tasing the oldest nonthreatening man,
    Tasing the youngest weakest non threatening woman possible,
    Tasing or shooting the youngest child possible who could possibly as justification pass as an adult from behind,
    Shooting the highest number of blacks for the crime of being black and going about their mundane daily business,
    Like being at home in the middle of the night minding his own business, wow imagine the accolades she is getting because that one really takes the prize (I'm just curious as can be about how they plan to get away with this one),
    Shooting and killing the youngest child possible who is holding a fake gun and who happens to be black of course because that would NEVER happen to a white child,
    What else ... I know I'm forgetting something. They must have the award system down to a science with charts and graphs and subcategories within categories, and cross linking between genres, think of the possibilities! What else could possibly explain this rash of police brutality?!?!?!?! Wake up people, they are being rewarded!!!!!!
    Now in a special category by itself which are sure to garner many bonus points are tasing and shooting incidents which involve failure to respond to their commands. Being naturally obtuse I believe, the thugs with guns do not seem to understand along with the fact that they don't care that not everyone speaks English or Spanish and that some people are <gasp> ... DEAF ... Failing to respond to an officer's oral command means the DEATH PENALTY by COP. (Which is why they were so surprised they didn't kill the dandelion lady. He might have been penalized with a loss of points for that.) So this must be the biggest prize of all ... when the victim at the hands of the police DOESN'T UNDERSTAND or CAN'T HEAR their commands. Shooting and killing garners more points than tasing obviously. **WINNER**WINNER**WINNER**

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 16 Sep 2018 @ 3:15pm

    Police in a lot of areas DO play "games" with citizens lives.

    In the UK, they play snooker. stop someone with a white car (the white ball) red car/ball, then a colored car(black for the most points), then start over.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    K Brown, 22 Sep 2018 @ 11:52pm

    Someone needs to explain

    I see these types of things constantly on the internet. The cops say this, that and whatever, but...
    It seems to me, if I was arrested for something, that I would appear in court prepared, I would as the judge exactly why the word of the cop is always taken as fact. I would then supply an inch or so of documents showing cops being caught lying, planting evidence etc, and then ask again what makes a cops word more accurate and truthful than mine.
    I would be willing to bet no judge would be able to supply an answer.
    If nothing else, I would have established reasonable doubt as to what the cop said.
    Now, this only works if you did nothing wrong, and the cop just pulled a “I’m a cop, my word is law”.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Uriel-238 (profile), 23 Sep 2018 @ 1:09am

      "no judge would be able to supply an answer."

      The problem is, no judge has to. They and juries often believe law enforcement simply because they are the police. And the judge doesn't need to explain himself.

      It's the same way judges don't have to explain why we believe a $2 preliminary drug test known for false positives entirely indicates that drugs were present without further testing.

      It's the same way judges don't have to explain why we still think dog sniffs aren't a search themselves, but when they signal an indication of probable cause, even when they yield up to 93% false positives, and it is known some trainers train trick pony dogs that signal whenever the handler wants him to.

      The legal system is not interested in justice, but in convictions. And filling jail cells. They have no interest in actual investigation and resent efforts to exculpate falsely-convicted inmates.

      It may just be that we built the entire system wrong so it pursues the wrong objectives.

      link to this | view in chronology ]


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