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Forgery suspect killed by cop restricting his airway

I've never said what happened was proper. I'm talking about how to avoid having it happen to you.

So are the Black Lives Matter protesters.

The difference is, you are blaming the victim of police brutality while the protesters are putting the blame squarely where it belongs - on the needlessly violent cops committing the brutality.

The best way to avoid being a victim of police brutality is to weed out the cops most likely to make you one, and to train the rest in ways to control a situation without escalating it into a violent confrontation.

Somebody can play a role in what happened to them without excusing what happened.
 
Sort of like some rapes, maybe. Best not to struggle. Or provocatively wear a short skirt in the first place. Good advice, Loren. Maybe Floyd tried to flirt with one of the police officers or something and triggered his homophobia.
 
I mean it’s not as if you’ve mentioned this angle just once in passing, and spent most of the time laying the blame where it belongs, is it?

If you want to keep banging on and on about it, why don’t you go and start a thread on the issues around the problems with resisting arrest and stop trying to defend the indefensible in this one, where it’s clearly not really very relevant?
 
'He just doesn't get it': has Trump been left behind by America's awakening on racism? | US news | The Guardian
Trump’s sixth sense for striking populist notes appears to have deserted him in the wake of the death of George Floyd, an African American man killed when a white Minneapolis police officer kneeled on his neck for nearly nine minutes, sparking Black Lives Matter protests nationwide.

Over the last three weeks the president has found himself on the wrong side of public opinion – and history – on everything from police reform to symbols of the Confederacy which fought a civil war to preserve slavery 150 years ago. Even a sport synonymous with his base, Nascar (National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing), is on a different wavelength having banned the Confederate flag from its events.

...
“Whether it is suggesting shooting protesters or siccing dogs on them, pre-emptively defending the Confederate names of military installations or arguing that his supporters ‘love the black people’, Mr Trump increasingly sounds like a cultural relic, detached from not just the left-leaning protesters in the streets but also the country’s political middle and even some Republican allies and his own military leaders,” the New York Times wrote on Thursday.

...
Meanwhile Trump’s economic adviser Larry Kudlow said: “I don’t believe there is systemic racism in the US.” Asked if the president believes there is a problem with institutional racism, press secretary Kayleigh McEnany replied: “I think this is the fourth time I’ve been asked it, and I’ve said each and every time: there are injustices that we have seen... and I would say this president has done a whole lot more than Democrats have ever done when it comes to rectifying injustices.”
That is absolute bullshit. What does she think LBJ did?
 
Yesterday, two interesting developments in the Floyd case.

First, the Minneapolis police chief revealed that ex-officers Chauvin and Thao had training to prevent suffocation in people being restrained face down: (https://www.startribune.com/police-chief-derek-chauvin-knew-what-he-was-doing/571443282/):
Derek Chauvin and Tou Thao — two of the officers involved in killing George Floyd May 25 — both took department training on preventing suffocation in people being restrained face down, the Minneapolis Police Department confirmed.

In one of his most forceful comments yet on Floyd’s killing, Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo issued a statement Monday night, saying, “Chauvin knew what he was doing.”

“Mr. George Floyd’s tragic death was not due to a lack of training — the training was there,” he said. “This was murder — it wasn’t a lack of training. This is why I took swift action regarding the involved officers’ employment with MPD,” Arradondo said.

Second, the head the Minneapolis police union, Bob Kroll agreed that Chauvin should be fired: (https://www.startribune.com/lt-bob-kroll-mpls-police-union-is-being-scapegoated-by-failed-leaders/571439422/)
However, he acknowledged in an interview aired Tuesday on “CBS This Morning,” that Floyd’s curbside arrest “does look and sound horrible” on the Facebook video shot by a bystander. It documents the unarmed and handcuffed Floyd repeating “I can’t breathe” and begging for his life.

Kroll went further in a follow-up interview with KARE-11, on Tuesday in his criticism of former officer Derek Chauvin, who planted his knee in Floyd’s neck, saying the officer’s firing was justified because “we’ve got a pretty good picture of what Chauvin did. It’s easy to form judgment there and terminate.”
 
'He just doesn't get it': has Trump been left behind by America's awakening on racism? | US news | The Guardian
Trump’s sixth sense for striking populist notes appears to have deserted him in the wake of the death of George Floyd, an African American man killed when a white Minneapolis police officer kneeled on his neck for nearly nine minutes, sparking Black Lives Matter protests nationwide.

Over the last three weeks the president has found himself on the wrong side of public opinion – and history – on everything from police reform to symbols of the Confederacy which fought a civil war to preserve slavery 150 years ago. Even a sport synonymous with his base, Nascar (National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing), is on a different wavelength having banned the Confederate flag from its events.

...
“Whether it is suggesting shooting protesters or siccing dogs on them, pre-emptively defending the Confederate names of military installations or arguing that his supporters ‘love the black people’, Mr Trump increasingly sounds like a cultural relic, detached from not just the left-leaning protesters in the streets but also the country’s political middle and even some Republican allies and his own military leaders,” the New York Times wrote on Thursday.

...
Meanwhile Trump’s economic adviser Larry Kudlow said: “I don’t believe there is systemic racism in the US.” Asked if the president believes there is a problem with institutional racism, press secretary Kayleigh McEnany replied: “I think this is the fourth time I’ve been asked it, and I’ve said each and every time: there are injustices that we have seen... and I would say this president has done a whole lot more than Democrats have ever done when it comes to rectifying injustices.”
That is absolute bullshit. What does she think LBJ did?
Well Trump did pardon Jack Johnson, so clearly his record on race is spotless.
 
Yesterday, two interesting developments in the Floyd case.

First, the Minneapolis police chief revealed that ex-officers Chauvin and Thao had training to prevent suffocation in people being restrained face down: (https://www.startribune.com/police-chief-derek-chauvin-knew-what-he-was-doing/571443282/):
Derek Chauvin and Tou Thao — two of the officers involved in killing George Floyd May 25 — both took department training on preventing suffocation in people being restrained face down, the Minneapolis Police Department confirmed.

In one of his most forceful comments yet on Floyd’s killing, Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo issued a statement Monday night, saying, “Chauvin knew what he was doing.”

“Mr. George Floyd’s tragic death was not due to a lack of training — the training was there,” he said. “This was murder — it wasn’t a lack of training. This is why I took swift action regarding the involved officers’ employment with MPD,” Arradondo said.

Second, the head the Minneapolis police union, Bob Kroll agreed that Chauvin should be fired: (https://www.startribune.com/lt-bob-kroll-mpls-police-union-is-being-scapegoated-by-failed-leaders/571439422/)
However, he acknowledged in an interview aired Tuesday on “CBS This Morning,” that Floyd’s curbside arrest “does look and sound horrible” on the Facebook video shot by a bystander. It documents the unarmed and handcuffed Floyd repeating “I can’t breathe” and begging for his life.

Kroll went further in a follow-up interview with KARE-11, on Tuesday in his criticism of former officer Derek Chauvin, who planted his knee in Floyd’s neck, saying the officer’s firing was justified because “we’ve got a pretty good picture of what Chauvin did. It’s easy to form judgment there and terminate.”

Watching the recording of the killing, it seems to me that Chauvin knew what he was doing, and his intent was to hurt or kill Mr Floyd. And knowing they had worked together in the past and there was allegedly bad blood between the two adds context to Chauvin's seemingly inexplicable conduct. I believe what we witnessed was cold-blooded murder carried out under the authority and protection afforded by a police uniform, and supported by the actions of other police officers present at the scene.

It is interesting to note that the head of the police union is able to speak out clearly and unambiguously against Chauvin's actions, but a few of our friends on these forums are still defending the killing as justifiable and routine.
 
Unquestioned police authority and the concern of going aganst it, being charged for obstruction, etc, probably prevented bystanders from being more assertive in their attempts to help Floyd.
 
Unquestioned police authority and the concern of going aganst it, being charged for obstruction, etc, probably prevented bystanders from being more assertive in their attempts to help Floyd.
Well, and the fact that the cops aren't the least bit hesitant to use deadly force for even mild resistance. Very few people are willing to risk their lives to save a stranger.
 
The Elijah McClain case is next level compared to George Floyd.

500 mg injection of Ketamine by EMTs to a skinny guy who seemed to be already passed out?


The DA's report on the case

http://adamsbroomfieldda.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/ICD-8-24-19.pdf

Based on reading that, and not having any other familiarity with the case, including video evidence, it does seem like a reasonable outcome (the legal decision I mean), certainly by American policing standards, in the circumstances (or even any reasonable standards perhaps) even if tragic.

My only question might be whether the police suspicions about the suspect justified trying to detain (and search) him in the first instance. It seems nothing was found, no gun for example (unless I missed something).

So did they unnecessarily escalate the situation? Hard to say, given that he was apparently acting (and dressed) oddly and had been reported for that. But it sounds like he had mental health issues perhaps, not that he was a criminal.
 
The Elijah McClain case is next level compared to George Floyd.

500 mg injection of Ketamine by EMTs to a skinny guy who seemed to be already passed out?


The DA's report on the case

http://adamsbroomfieldda.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/ICD-8-24-19.pdf

The Elijah McClain case is next level compared to George Floyd.

500 mg injection of Ketamine by EMTs to a skinny guy who seemed to be already passed out?


The DA's report on the case

http://adamsbroomfieldda.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/ICD-8-24-19.pdf

Based on reading that, and not having any other familiarity with the case, including video evidence, it does seem like a reasonable outcome (the legal decision I mean), certainly by American policing standards, in the circumstances (or even any reasonable standards perhaps) even if tragic.

My only question might be whether the police suspicions about the suspect justified trying to detain (and search) him in the first instance. It seems nothing was found, no gun for example (unless I missed something).

So did they unnecessarily escalate the situation? Hard to say, given that he was apparently acting (and dressed) oddly and had been reported for that. But it sounds like he had mental health issues perhaps, not that he was a criminal.

It's reasonable to detain someone acting suspiciously even if it turns out to have a harmless cause. (Example: Long, long ago I was stopped by the police for being in a home construction zone at night. Construction zone at night = a street with no traffic, good for driver's training.)

As for "passed out"--that's what a carotid hold does but it doesn't last more than a few seconds after you let go. (And maintaining it too long is deadly, you can't keep someone under control that way.) Nor do the drugs they found explain what happened.

I wouldn't be one bit surprised if this actually was some synthetic drug they didn't test for. (They keep coming up with new ones.)
 
It's reasonable to detain someone acting suspiciously even if it turns out to have a harmless cause.

In most US jurisdictions, the police need to have reasonable suspicion of unlawful activity in order to detain someone. While the standard for reasonable suspicion is not as rigorous as probable cause (which is needed to conduct a search of private property or make an arrest), reasonable suspicion cannot be based simply on a hunch or a nonspecific suspicion. The police officer has to be able to articulate specific facts that lead to a rational and specific inference of potential unlawful activity in order to detain someone. "He looked suspicious to me", or "he was acting suspiciously" - are likely not good grounds for detention. "He matched the description of the suspect from a robbery four blocks away that happened 5 minutes ago, and he seemed nervous or agitated as I approached him" - likely a legitimate basis for detention based on reasonable suspicion.
 
I wouldn't be one bit surprised if this actually was some synthetic drug they didn't test for.

Of course you wouldn't. But the bottom line is there is no evidence of any drugs, or weapons.

I've watched the bodycam footage. He doesn't look or sound as if he was obviously high on drugs. Not saying he wasn't, but it is speculation. He also doesn't seem to be doing anything wrong at all when the police arrive, just walking home along the street (albeit wearing a ski mask, allegedly because he had anemia, but whatever the reason he hadn't done anything wrong). Yet within 20 seconds, two officers had a hold of him, because he didn't seem keen to stop for them initially. That said, (a) I think he was listening to music on headphones so may not have heard the request and (b) the bodycam footage shows him telling officers that he was trying to stop his music to listen to them. It's clear he didn't like being grabbed, but neither would I. He appeared to just want them to let go rather than anything else, such as wanting to flee. One of the officers says something about a gun, but it's not entirely clear. He may have thought McClain was trying to get one of the officer's guns but this is not at all obvious and to me, watching McClains behaviour it feels unlikely. I'd guess maybe the officers were a bit jumpy.

Very quickly they had him on the ground and were kneeling on his neck, off and on for 15 minutes. It all seems a tad over-enthusiastic to me, in the circumstances. He lost consciousness and regained it more than once, was vomiting and repeatedly pleading with officers to stop. He was a small, skinny little guy. There were 5 or 6 reasonably big and burly male officers there when they sedated him while I believe he was already handcuffed. I am a bit surprised at the need to inject him with ketamine at all. Also, do US ambulance staff have legal authority to inject someone on the street with a psychoactive substance without knowing their medical history prior?

I think it escalated a bit too quickly and I think the police were a bit over-zealous. Overall, that is not quite the way I would like my own neighbourhood to be policed.
 
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Poor Donald is having an internal struggle between his hatred for other peoples and his lust for power and it’s losing him this election. That and he is publicly saying and doing things his deplorables know they cannot get away with. He’s unknowingly showing his privileged separation between himself and the average joes that listen to him, listened to that loudmouth at the end of the bar. It’s also why people didn’t show up for his rally. They know everyone around Trump gets checked for the virus on a regular basis while they get nothing. And now the surge in viral infections while Trump still presents his ‘masks are for liberals’ nudge. Even his most gristled supporters must be wondering.
 
This article raises concerns about the greatly increased use of ketamine to sedate police suspects in Minneapolis. Number of cases of it being administered in such situations went up by 2000% (from only 3 to 67 per annum) between 2012 and 2017 for instance.

Minneapolis Investigates Police Use Of Ketamine On Suspects
https://www.npr.org/2018/06/30/6249...e-use-of-ketamine-on-suspects?t=1593338848937

This part (below) is potentially especially worrying. The claim is that the hospitals are partly complicit in increased police requests to use ketamine partly because they need subjects for the studies they are doing on ketamine. I have read this elsewhere also:

"You know, the scope of the oversight report is mostly police, but they do touch on this a little bit. There's one case in particular where someone, you know, being recorded on police body camera asks why they sedated somebody and the paramedic talks about the study and says well, you know, we're doing this study and so we needed to give them ketamine. There was one woman we talked to who had relapsed on alcohol and she was in her apartment and her sponsor, an AA, called and said can you just do a welfare check on my friend. I just want to make sure she's OK. They ended up coming into her apartment - said she didn't want this drug, they gave it to her anyway.

She wakes up 24 hours later with a breathing tube down her throat. And then on her way out, they hand her this form that says, by the way, you know, you're enrolled in this study. And that's pretty common, that's a pretty typical story. There are several investigations going on right now including one with former acting U.S. Attorney General Sally Yates. She's been appointed by the mayor, here, to come in and do an independent investigation. So obviously they're very concerned."


If true, very ironic. Giving a date-rape drug to people without their consent.
 
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This article raises concerns about the greatly increased use of ketamine to sedate police suspects in Minneapolis. Number of cases of it being administered in such situations went up by 2000% (from only 3 to 67 per annum) between 2012 and 2017 for instance.

Minneapolis Investigates Police Use Of Ketamine On Suspects
https://www.npr.org/2018/06/30/6249...e-use-of-ketamine-on-suspects?t=1593338848937

This part (below) is potentially especially worrying. The claim is that the hospitals are partly complicit in increased police requests to use ketamine partly because they need subjects for the studies they are doing on ketamine. I have read this elsewhere also:

"You know, the scope of the oversight report is mostly police, but they do touch on this a little bit. There's one case in particular where someone, you know, being recorded on police body camera asks why they sedated somebody and the paramedic talks about the study and says well, you know, we're doing this study and so we needed to give them ketamine. There was one woman we talked to who had relapsed on alcohol and she was in her apartment and her sponsor, an AA, called and said can you just do a welfare check on my friend. I just want to make sure she's OK. They ended up coming into her apartment - said she didn't want this drug, they gave it to her anyway.

She wakes up 24 hours later with a breathing tube down her throat. And then on her way out, they hand her this form that says, by the way, you know, you're enrolled in this study. And that's pretty common, that's a pretty typical story. There are several investigations going on right now including one with former acting U.S. Attorney General Sally Yates. She's been appointed by the mayor, here, to come in and do an independent investigation. So obviously they're very concerned."


If true, very ironic. Giving a date-rape drug to people without their consent.

We should all be outraged at the use of ketamine or any other drug being administered at the hands of the police.

Full stop.
 
Unquestioned police authority and the concern of going aganst it, being charged for obstruction, etc, probably prevented bystanders from being more assertive in their attempts to help Floyd.

Unquestioned police brutality is a more appropriate description. You want to jump into a herring shoal the save them from a feeding frenzy by sharks?
 
We should all be outraged at the use of ketamine or any other drug being administered at the hands of the police.

Full stop.

I 100% agree. I can maybe imagine some case where it is justified, but certainly not this case, and the fact that it is becoming common is outrageous. I had never heard of this. What the hell is going on in Minneapolis?
 
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