Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 17,099
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
This report (http://triblive.com/news/allegheny/6291525-74/officer-woman-pittsburgh#axzz35BrPOcFx) adds the following information:
1) the police officer claims the woman attacked him first,
2) the victim is facing assault charges for this incident and an earlier incident with her mother, and
3) according to the officer Chatterji's report
The video shows the officer grabbing Lawther by the hair and punching her several times in the stomach. Chatterji wrote that he was forced to do so because he was being struck by onlookers and she kept fighting. He wrote that he feared for his safety.
What nonsense. The video shows very clearly he wasn't being struck by onlookers and that she didn't "keep" fighting (if she ever fought to begin with, the video doesn't show anything remotely like that), she adopted a fetal defensive posture, and clearly wasn't fighting. The fact that she's facing assault charges for this incident (regardless of the validity of any prior charges she's faced with) when the evidence so clearly shows her to be a victim is quite frankly, sickening. Even if his claim that she struck first is correct, which I have serious doubts about, it's painfully obvious that his response was extreme and unwarranted.
Perspective is important. The facts and knowledge available on the ground for the officer at the time are different than those available to the watcher of a video.

Part of being a social, normal, empathetic and ethical person is trying to see things from the (often limited and incomplete) perspective of others and determining if their reaction was evil based not on your available information, but rather upon theirs, whether the problem was malice or ignorance.