Alright, I'm going to copy a comment I made earlier:CriticKitten said:This is where you stopped being accurate. Just because an officer pulls a gun does not mean he intends to use lethal force. In fact, shooting for extremities is a technique often employed to disable a fleeing suspect or disarm an armed suspect.
You are making the presumption that he was attempting to use lethal force.
Unfortunately for the both of you, the evidence doesn't corroborate your story. There is no indication of the officer's intent with the initial shooting. He may have been aiming for the fleeing suspect's leg and missed.
Fact is, a gun is designed to put lethal holes in a target. Police are trained to use their gun to put lethal holes in people.Actually, US police are trained to shoot to kill, because if you're using your gun, you're going to get someone dead.
'Non-lethal shooting' is largely a myth. Shooting someone in an extremity can just as easily lead to death as shooting them in the center of mass, so the police aren't trained to risk missing to take limb shots.
So if he was adhering to his training, his poor aim was probably merely a reflection of the stressful situation and he was therefore putting forth lethal intent.
If he was TRYING to shoot the kid's arm, then he was not only using a lethal weapon 'incorrectly', he directly went against his training to do so. He would have been trying to be a action hero or some sort of cowboy and putting the suspect and other people nearby's lives at risk.
In short, as far as I am aware, all weapons training beats into your head that if you're going to use your gun on something, it's to kill it.
Given the above facts(emphasis, these are indeed true), the default assumption should be that if the officer pulled his gun and fired it at the suspect, it was with an intent to kill.
If that ISN'T the case, it belies either him making very poor decisions, or that the Furgeson PD are terrifyingly lax in their training. On reflection though, given pictures we've seen of the police pointing assault rifles at peaceful protesters at point blank range, however, it may be the latter. And that is a very troubling notion.
Then it's fortunate that, as I've said a few times now, the evidence suggests that isn't what happened. The person was not "gunned down" while fleeing, he was hit once in the arm supposedly from behind, and then hit five more times while facing the officer.I can't claim I'd be comfortable with a police force that opens fire on a fleeing, unarmed suspect in a public thoroughfare. At minimum, that implies he made some poor decisions when under stress.
If you wanted to be obnoxiously technical with the above information, brown may have charged the officer in self defense if he felt the cop was about to kill him while trying to run away. Doesn't condone his actions, or I would fault the officer for defending themselves at that point, but if both of them are making poor, panicked decisions, brown may have charged the officer(if he even did that) in an attempt to do something other than getting gunned down.
Without more information, it's possible to tell. I just don't like police gunning down unarmed fleeing people.
You're both using wordplay to make it sound much worse than it actually is. But it is inaccurate to say the phrase "gunned down a fleeing suspect" because he was not "gunned down" until the point at which he was facing/charging the officer.
Speak accurately, or not at all. We don't need more people on the internet inciting tensions over this case with faulty wordplay. We have far too many of those already.
What I was saying is it's entirely plausible that when he was shot in the arm the first time, he turned and charged the officer in an ill-planned strategy of self defense after being shot once while trying to escape.You're both using wordplay to make it sound much worse than it actually is. But it is inaccurate to say the phrase "gunned down a fleeing suspect" because he was not "gunned down" until the point at which he was facing/charging the officer.
I made NO insinuation that he was shot the other times while escaping. Only the first.
However, it is(as we pointed above) a fact that the officer open fired upon him while he was escaping. It hit him in the arm, but just as easily could have been in his back, or head. See my above point about using lethal weapons.
If I was running from someone and they shot me at ALL, arm or anywhere, I would have pretty good reason to believe they're trying to kill me. In short hand, "gunned down".
If you think it's an unreasonable stance to believe that a person that shot you in the arm from behind while you were attempting to flee is trying to kill you, then I have major questions about your sense of self preservation.
He was not gunned down at the time of the first shot hitting him, but I very seriously doubt that the officer would have stopped firing if Brown continued to flee. And if that would have been what happened, we would have used a phrase such as "gunned down".
I guess since he was "lucky" and wasn't "gunned down" from the first bullet(again, entirely possible it would have happened), a more accurate statement would be:
"Without more information, it's possible to tell. I just don't like police shooting unarmed fleeing people."
Is that sufficiently accurate?