he's PAID to protect and serve

thus he can murder an unarmed man, claim he felt threatened, and be justified.

http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2013/11/06/2902591/police-shooting-unarmed-man/

Chicago Police Officer Gildardo Sierra will not face any criminal charges for the killing of an unarmed man, Cook County prosecutors announced Tuesday, despite video footage that showed Sierra standing over the victim, Flint Farmer, and shooting him multiple times. Prosecutors concluded that Sierra may have reasonably mistaken Farmer’s cell phone for a gun, and therefore was justified in firing off all 16 rounds in his gun at the unarmed man.

Farmer was Sierra’s third shooting in six months, yet the officer remained on the job. The video showed Farmer lying on the ground bleeding as Sierra shot three bullets into his back. An autopsy later determined those three shots in his back were the fatal wounds.

Sierra eventually admitted that he drank “multiple” beers before he went to work that night. However, the city waited more than five hours after the shooting to give him a breath test, so there was no way to tell if he was impaired during the shooting.

The CPD also ruled Farmer’s shooting justified, though Superintendent Garry McCarthy later told the Chicago Tribune that Sierra should not have been allowed back on the street after the two previous shootings. McCarthy said the department had no way of tracking officers’ shooting records.

In the prosecutors’ defense, putting a cop in prison is remarkably difficult. Police officers are allowed to shoot if they fear for their lives, and proving that use of force was “unreasonable” sets a very high bar. Few police who have used force under suspicious circumstances ever face a judge. A 2007 study by UChicago law professor Craig Futterman found that just 19 of 10,149 complains of excessive force, illegal searches, racial abuse, sexual abuse, and false arrests led to a police suspension of a week or more. Individual police officers are also largely protected from damages claims in civil court through “qualified immunity.”

Though Sierra has gotten off essentially scot-free for his actions, Chicago taxpayers are not so lucky. The city settled a lawsuit over Farmer’s death for $4.1 million in December. Chicago has already paid out about $50 million to settle lawsuits from decades of police torture, and recently paid $8.5 million on behalf of an officer who shot a teenager in the back. Other cities plagued by police misconduct have had to shell out similarly large sums; New York taxpayers paid $185.6 million for one fiscal year of lawsuits against officers, and police misconduct cost Oakland, CA more than $13 million in fiscal year 2011.
 
I think it'd be cool if citizens could mistake cops walkie talkies for guns and then shoot them in self defense.
 
I think it'd be cool if citizens could mistake cops walkie talkies for guns and then shoot them in self defense.
idiots like zappa and usf don't believe that citizens should be allowed to make that kind of mistake though. citizens must be held accountable for mistakes. cops need to have immunity, otherwise they wouldn't want to do the job.
 
idiots like zappa and usf don't believe that citizens should be allowed to make that kind of mistake though. citizens must be held accountable for mistakes. cops need to have immunity, otherwise they wouldn't want to do the job.

Where did I ever say or suggest such?
Please produce any such comment, or else be seen as the lying idiot you are.
 
A doctor can sit through all types of pre-surgical consultations, read numerous medical reports on the patient, have everything deliberately and carefully laid out in front of him beforehand... and he'll *STILL* go into an operating room and amputate the wrong limb.

Or worse, maybe he'll actually kill the patient through negligence or error.

Do potheads line up screaming for the doctor to go to prison? Criminal charges? Anything more than civil liability? No, it's all chalked up to "a bad day."

Cops don't have that time beforehand to assess everything completely. It's a split second life-or-death decision. And if it goes poorly, people feel free to judge them with a predisposition towards intentional malice on the officer's part.

They're just liberals masquerading as libertarians.
 
have you conveniently forgotten the comparisons you made in reference to shooting a 13 year old kid or a drunk guy making gun sounds with a hose faucet?????

Show me where I said what you accused me of, if you have them?

...usf don't believe that citizens should be allowed to make that kind of mistake though. citizens must be held accountable for mistakes. cops need to have immunity, otherwise they wouldn't want to do the job.

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thus he can murder an unarmed man, claim he felt threatened, and be justified.

http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2013/11/06/2902591/police-shooting-unarmed-man/

Chicago Police Officer Gildardo Sierra will not face any criminal charges for the killing of an unarmed man, Cook County prosecutors announced Tuesday, despite video footage that showed Sierra standing over the victim, Flint Farmer, and shooting him multiple times. Prosecutors concluded that Sierra may have reasonably mistaken Farmer’s cell phone for a gun, and therefore was justified in firing off all 16 rounds in his gun at the unarmed man.

Farmer was Sierra’s third shooting in six months, yet the officer remained on the job. The video showed Farmer lying on the ground bleeding as Sierra shot three bullets into his back. An autopsy later determined those three shots in his back were the fatal wounds.

Sierra eventually admitted that he drank “multiple” beers before he went to work that night. However, the city waited more than five hours after the shooting to give him a breath test, so there was no way to tell if he was impaired during the shooting.

The CPD also ruled Farmer’s shooting justified, though Superintendent Garry McCarthy later told the Chicago Tribune that Sierra should not have been allowed back on the street after the two previous shootings. McCarthy said the department had no way of tracking officers’ shooting records.

In the prosecutors’ defense, putting a cop in prison is remarkably difficult. Police officers are allowed to shoot if they fear for their lives, and proving that use of force was “unreasonable” sets a very high bar. Few police who have used force under suspicious circumstances ever face a judge. A 2007 study by UChicago law professor Craig Futterman found that just 19 of 10,149 complains of excessive force, illegal searches, racial abuse, sexual abuse, and false arrests led to a police suspension of a week or more. Individual police officers are also largely protected from damages claims in civil court through “qualified immunity.”

Though Sierra has gotten off essentially scot-free for his actions, Chicago taxpayers are not so lucky. The city settled a lawsuit over Farmer’s death for $4.1 million in December. Chicago has already paid out about $50 million to settle lawsuits from decades of police torture, and recently paid $8.5 million on behalf of an officer who shot a teenager in the back. Other cities plagued by police misconduct have had to shell out similarly large sums; New York taxpayers paid $185.6 million for one fiscal year of lawsuits against officers, and police misconduct cost Oakland, CA more than $13 million in fiscal year 2011.


All I can say is thank GOD for people like STY!

I mean, if it weren't for STY's amazing mental powers, we'd just have to take that officer's word that what he claimed, really happened.

Thankfully, we can use the Amazing STYskin's ability to read minds to tell if the Officer is speaking the truth or not!
 
idiots like zappa and usf don't believe that citizens should be allowed to make that kind of mistake though. citizens must be held accountable for mistakes. cops need to have immunity, otherwise they wouldn't want to do the job.

Cops should be afraid to do their jobs. They should be literally TERRIFIED that if they fuck up or abuse their power that they WILL get convicted and hung in the streets. The death penalty should be reserved for corrupt cops and politicians.
 
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