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when the two have zero in common, yes.
[h=1]Police vindicated by autopsy results?[/h]has "zero" to do with the article - which is about the autopsy results?
when the two have zero in common, yes.
Not an answer, please deposit 25 cents and try again.why did they beat and torture rodney king? why did they chase down and beat senseless a black teenager with a 1 liter soda bottle in his pocket? why did one pile drive an 84 year old man and break his neck? why did they shoot and kill a man for not allowing an illegal entry in to his home over a misdemeanor traffic violation? why did they shoot and kill an optometrist who was running a high stakes football pool?
do they need a reason?Not an answer, please deposit 25 cents and try again.
You said you used logic and reason. Your reason is what? People just do stuff sometimes?do they need a reason?
I said I used logic and reason. not you. I've posted enough police misconduct articles on here to fill a book, yet there are some on here just bound and determined to ignore it's widespread abusive manner in how they conduct themselves with us. you appear to be one of them.You said you used logic and reason. Your reason is what? People just do stuff sometimes?
Ya well when its the cops that do their own atopsies they can say pretty much what they want.
simply amazing that during such a serious incident and investigation, that the police department is so willing to be OPEN and TRANSPARENT with all this info about the dead suspect, unlike other investigations that focus on police misconduct complaints that remain CLOSED and NON PUBLIC with no info ever being released to the media. that being said, this is highly unusual for seattle PD, a force known well for being over zealous in its law enforcment practices, that they would simply do a pat down and NOT cuff a suspect before putting them in the back of a patrol car, then upon a second search NOT taking the cell phone from the suspect so they could search texts and phone numbers of a drug suspect. VERY unusual.
A man police say shot himself in the head while his hands were cuffed behind him in the back of an Arkansas patrol car tested positive for methamphetamine, anti-anxiety medication and other drugs, according to an autopsy report released Monday that listed his death as a suicide. The muzzle of a handgun that Chavis Carter apparently concealed from arresting officers was placed against his right temple when it was fired. The report, signed by three medical examiners, included a drug analysis showing Carter's urine and blood indicated methamphetamine and other drug use. The report, released under a Freedom of Information Act request, said Carter's blood also tested positive for at least trace amounts of the anti-anxiety medication diazepam and the painkiller oxycodone. His urine test also returned a positive result for marijuana.