solidsnake101023 said:
http://www.courthousenews.com/2011/06/29/37770.htm and http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/dayton-news/family-sues-city-over-sons-arrest-1198555.html
any thought you would like to share about this
We've heard the parent's story, and it holds water. Now look at it from the cop's perspective:
Man on bike. Yes, man--kid was bigger than I am, and didn't have his age tattooed on his head, now did he? Going the wrong way, then hops up on the sidewalk. Cop's thinking, "I need to let this guy know not to do that. I'm so sick of responding to injured cyclist calls because they didn't follow the rules."
He calls out to this man... who
bolts. Suddenly, the cop is thinking, "What the hell? Is he carrying something? Drugs? A weapon?" Sorry, but when you run from a cop, you give him reason to chase. So the cop pursues.
Next, this guy is running into a house. I don't know if you've ever
known a cop, or participated in any training, but there's one pretty universal concept that is taught:
You have no idea what this man is reaching for. That's why the whole "put your hands up!" thing.
Most of the time someone is "wrongfully" tased, sprayed, or worse, shot, it's because they were reaching into a vehicle or pocket or bag when the cop was telling them to stop.
Think about it from the cop's perspective. How long would it take this person to pull out a weapon and hurt someone? Shorter than it would take the cop to think about how long it would take to think about it. Then this guy turns and starts yelling at the cop, having already demonstrated his willingness to resist.
That's why he tased the guy. He was running into his house. For what? A weapon? Back-up? Then, because he couldn't get it unlocked fast enough, he turns on the cop in a non-peaceful manner. So he attempted to use one of his non-lethals.
Then someone else opens the door and pulls the guy in! Great, now there's two of them. And then three! Three yelling people coming at you.
----
Now, yes, the kid was mentally handicapped. How did the cop know that? Yeah, he was technically a kid. Again, not to appearances, so how would the cop know? Yeah, he ran home to his
mom, but the cop doesn't have a damned birth certificate. The cop was acting on the information he had available.
Sure, the mom says she tried to "explain."
While fighting the officer. Have you ever been in a fight? Ever try to have a conversation, in which someone gives you information to remember, while you're fighting them? Ridiculous.
So, yes, the cop was mistaken.
But not maliciously. He didn't wake up in the morning and say, "Well, time to go beat up a crippled kid. Ooh, and a bicycler."
And the mother and friend
did escalate the situation, to the point that the cop
had to use a baton to get things under control. Again,
not maliciously. She didn't wake up in the morning and say, "Well, time to go resist arrest. Ooh, and endanger my son."
The cop was working with understandably incomplete information. The mom just wasn't thinking straight, and she acted out of maternal panic. Neither of them was doing it intentionally.