And they do not have a duty to protect somebody who wants to kill them.
They do if that person is a civilian who has not yet been convicted of the crime of trying to kill them.
Not necessarily. Often, usually even, they contributed to the death of a "civilian" precisely because they were doing their job
Incorrect. The first responsibility of a peace officer is to ensure the safety of all citizens in the area in which he is operating. It is understood that the officer's powers are limited and he cannot always achieve an outcome that sees EVERYONE come through alive. Even then, his responsibility is to the civilians he is sworn to protect above all else.
Sometimes serving and protecting the community requires using deadly force against criminals victimizing said community.
No it does not. Serving and protecting the community means taking immediate and effective action to mitigate threats to that community. Deadly force is ONE of the tools an officer has at his disposal to do that; it is not the safest, the most effective, or even the most important. An officer's duty is NOT to identify criminals against which to use deadly force, his duty is to prevent criminals from causing harm to citizens in his community. Those are two VERY different things.
With all due respect, that is nonsense. Police officers are not in the "unnecessary self-sacrifice" business.
I like how you slipped "unnecessary" in there, like the right of citizens to remain alive is automatically less important than the rights of police officers. That's cute!
This is not the movies. Often "capturing the perpetrator alive" is not feasible.
More often than not, it IS feasible. The current controversy over police use of deadly force exists in the first place because of a slew of events where it was not only feasible, but OBVIOUSLY so. Police officers in those cases took actions that ended the lives of suspects when those suspects posed no immediate threat either to the officers or to the community at large; officers initiated confrontations which then escalated into VIOLENT confrontations unnecessarily.
The "civilian's" own actions (shooting at police) led to his death.
If not for the fact that the current controversy is stirred by the deaths of individuals who were both unarmed and made no attempt to shoot at police, this would ALMOST be a good point.
But only almost. An armed suspect is still entitled to the right of due process whether he has threatened the lives of a police officer or not. Far more importantly is the fact that shooting at police officers is NOT an offense punishable by the death penalty in any state of the union, so even if police officers could prove beyond a reasonable doubt that that man DID, in fact, try to kill them, he would never be executed just for that.
Do you believe that police officers have a duty to uphold the law? Or is there a separate "street law" that police officers are uniquely qualified to enforce on their own initiative?
If the odds of a suspect being taken alive means withholding lethal force until AFTER the suspect has opened fire, then holding fire is also the preferable outcome.
Even if it means more dead and wounded cops?
Yes. This is precisely the reason cops are given heroes funerals and full honors, and why the community honors their sacrifices whenever they make them. Because those officers put the safety of their community ahead of their own lives, prioritizing public order and peace.
If that is no longer something we should expect from cops; if their overriding responsibility is just to cover their own asses; if "Badass cop will fuck you up if you don't obey his commands" is an image we're comfortable with, then dead cops aren't heroes, they're just state employees who died from job-related injuries.
There are WAY too many cops in my family for me to be truly comfortable with that idea, but there are also way too many "badass cop will fuck you up" policemen in this country for me to think that we are not already barreling towards that paradigm.
And that is a consequence of our desire to live in a civilized society that respects the rights of its citizens.
The citizens have no right to shoot at the police.
This does not change the fact that the citizens have the right to LIVE, a right that police officers are obliged to respect like they do any other. If police officers can choose to ignore that right when they feel threatened by civilians, it follows that civilians can make a similar choice when threatened by police.
If we are truly entitled to the right of due process and a trial by jury, then we can accept no circumstances under which a free citizen may waive that right.
Yes we can accept such circumstances.
You got a mouse in your pocket? Who is this "we" that thinks summary execution is acceptable for crimes against the police?
Since pointing a gun at a police officer does NOT negate your right of due process, then being killed by police officers for doing so is a violation of your rights.
Pointing a gun at anybody is grounds for legitimate self defense and can lead to your death without your rights being violated.
And yet people who are killed in supposedly self-defense circumstances are frequently sued by the families of the deceased for wrongful death and/or Federal indictments for
violating their civil rights.
That's precisely the reason why citizens are afforded the right of due process. Because the decision of whether or not a shooting is justified is a decision for the courts, not the cops.
Secondly, the most effective thing a police officer can do to guarantee his own safety is to find a safer line of work.
And if you mandate that police officers must allow perps to shoot at them that would happen to a lot of them.
Maybe it should. If anything it would result in a drastic reduction of bad cops.
OTOH, there IS a valid career path for individuals whose overriding concern is
protecting their own safety and that of their comrades in the performance of their duties.
In the same way, the most effective thing a doctor can do to avoid having to deal with sick people is to not be a doctor in the first place.
Not nearly the same thing. "Dealing with sick people" is analogous to "dealing with suspects". "Police officer is not doing his job if he has to kill a perp" would be analogous to "a physician is not doing his job if anybody dies during treatment". Both statements are equally ridiculous.
When we have a series of back-to-back cases of patients dying in emergency rooms because the attending physicians refused to treat them out of fear that they might be carrying undisclosed diseases, then those statements would be comparable.
The fact us we have NUMEROUS cases of police officers escalating to deadly force where doing so is CLEARLY avoidable. The public is not disputing the police officers' winning of gun battles with dangerous suspects; they're disputing the police's over-used claim that everyone they kill IS, in fact, dangerous. We know for a fact that this is not always the case, and it has come to light that this happens FAR more often than it should.
And the reason it happens is simple: police officers have, by and large, been allowed to forget the fact that their first duty is to the public and not to themselves. If we no longer expect police officers to be paragons of restraint and self-control in a wide range of situations -- as you are suggesting -- then we can really no longer trust them with the responsibility to use deadly force in their own defense. That leaves us with only two options:
1)
Cull the herd. Get rid of cops who can't handle the pressure, can't show restraint, and are more afraid of being injured or killed than they are of accidentally injuring or killing an innocent person (like
this guy, for example. Darren Wilson should be joining him in prison by now). If police officers want to enjoy the public's trust, then police departments need to make sure all of their officers are absolutely trustworthy.
2)
Brace yourself. If police departments are leveraging their legitimacy against the interests of their officers -- which is exactly what they are doing when they excuse overreactive use of deadly force -- then they should not be surprised by the manifestation of backlash, and should be even less surprise when the public begins to express indifference to that backlash. The murder of those two NYPD officers in the past week could very well be a manifestation of exactly that. Police departments cannot and will not continue to enjoy the support of the public if they explicitly place the public interest as secondary to their own.
You clearly prefer Option Two. That is NOT the preferable option, but it's the path we're currently on.
Letting themselves be shot by a perp is not a fundamental duty of a police officer
Open-ended question for you.
You're a cop.
You're on patrol in a high-crime neighborhood.
As you stop your car at a bus stop, you see a girl wearing a hoodie selling bags of something you suspect is marijuana, and when you stopped your car in front of her she stuffed the bags back into her pocket.
As you step out to question her, you notice a little red laser dot jittering in the middle of her chest. You realize that somewhere across the street, a sniper is drawing a bead on this kid. Turning your head for a second, you see an open window and you're pretty sure that's where the sniper is.
You have about three seconds to act. Do you
a) Step directly in front of her to block the sniper's line of fire
b) Pull out you gun and fire at the sniper
c) Get back into your car with the intention of calling for backup
d) Shoot the girl in the chest
Bearing in mind that you have only three seconds to act and can only choose ONE of these options, which of the above represents your fundamental duty as a cop?