s phi s
The One Man Band
Would you publicly arrest a cop who is uniform doing something wrong that you knew was wrong? For example in this case the cop on the opposite side of the car did not have his gun drawn and stated that he was not in danger as he did not see a weapon. Would you have arrested the cop who shot Philando Castile?
I know you are a cop but at the present time I have literally no faith in police what so ever. I have homeboys who are cops that I grew up with, even a first cousin with L.A. County who is contemplating retirement after Friday because he is sick of being associated with a legalized street gang.
Fair enough, and I can appreciate the question, and will do my best to answer it.....However there are a couple of layers to it, so stay with me.
In my opinion, as the other officer on the scene, I would not have arrested the officer on that scene....For that matter, I would not have arrested a civilian on that scene either. Solely putting myself in that other officer's shoes, I don't know what he saw that made him act in the manner he did. Sometimes one person sees things that the other doesn't. Did he just prevent me from getting ambushed? Or did he just shoot him for no reason? I wouldn't be able to answer either question from that perspective, and that's the QUICKEST way to get an arrest thrown out.
On the other hand, as an investigator, my job is to reconstruct the sequence of events as they happened. In this situation, I think the investigators got it right (somewhat) by bringing the charges against the officers. I would have submitted charges against him (based on what I know solely from the media accounts). To me, the charges from the investigators say that after reconstructing everything, they don't believe that him shooting Castille was reasonable given the circumstances. At that point, a custodial arrest is no longer an option. You have to submit the charges and let the attorneys and courts handle it from there. To me, THIS particular case was lost in the court room.
I understand that people have no faith in what we do. I get it...I truly do. One issue that I see from the inside looking out is that there is no true national standard for police. Each state certifies officers differently, and according to their own standards. Every local agency handles things their own way, and according to their own policies. One agency may handle it exactly like the next, but completely different from another. Large city departments handle things differently from small city departments. This is why I sometimes hesitate to offer an opinion, because my opinion is often rooted in the policies and procedures of my agency, which may be drastically different from a department thousands of miles and several states away. What I think may be wrong may be completely acceptable for that department and state.
With that said, I will say again what I have said several times. With a lot of these recent incidents, officers are putting themselves in bad positions, then resorting to force to bail them out. Ultimately, it will be judged by the courts as reasonable, because they will only be judged on the split seconds leading up to the force, not everything leading up to it. For example, Tamir Rice. Legally speaking, it was a justified shooting, because the officers feared he had a gun and was in proximity to use it on them. Personally, I think it was chicken shit, because they should have never been that close to start with. In my opinion, they created the situation of danger by riding that close to a person who is reported to have a gun. That's not what is taught. But ultimately, that part has a lot less weight in the judgment process than "we believed he had a gun and was close enough to use it". That's the legal standard, like it or not. Another example.....the cat that got shot in the car dealership in the Dallas area about a year ago that was high on something. Officer rushed in trying to be a damn hero, and now he's there, senses the danger that he should have sensed from the beginning, and ends up shooting him. Ultimately, the shooting will be judged as justified because once he was in there, they felt that the danger was enough to justify the shooting. I question why the hell he went in there in the first place.
There are many others that I could expound on. My whole point is that the legal standard is one thing. Personal opinion is yet another. I understand how this keeps happening. That does not mean that I agree with it. I am one man, and I do my part EVERY DAY, whether you believe it or not.