Cop in America doing a bad job, again

He was shot 6 times in the back. The cops must've felt really threatened by a black kid with his back to them.


Have you watched the helicopter footage? The last 10-15 shots were fired as he fell to the ground with his back to the officers. He was facing the officers when the shooting started. The helicopter footage also shows him jumping fencing and trying to avoid the police officers. The helicopter crew guided the cops on the ground. The cops undoubtedly mistook his cell phone for a gun but they acted in good faith. Clark's actions before he was confronted and immediately before the shooting significantly contributed to the situation.
 
Have you watched the helicopter footage? The last 10-15 shots were fired as he fell to the ground with his back to the officers. He was facing the officers when the shooting started. The helicopter footage also shows him jumping fencing and trying to avoid the police officers. The helicopter crew guided the cops on the ground. The cops undoubtedly mistook his cell phone for a gun but they acted in good faith. Clark's actions before he was confronted and immediately before the shooting significantly contributed to the situation.

He was facing them but it was dark and he had no way of knowing they were right around the corner from where he was. They fired about 5 shots, at which point he was already down. They then decided to unload another 12-13 rounds into him once he was already down. They then proceeded to wait about 5 minutes until approaching him. According to the autopsy (my last video), he was deemed to have died during that period.

The cops are on administrative leave, so we already know the department think something went terribly wrong.

 


Your last two videos are embarrassing biased. The helicopter footage is dramatically edited to make it look like they paused and then started shooting again. The autopsy video is highly speculative.

The full helicopter video shows everything start to finish.



Isn't administrative leave normal procedure while they investigate police shootings? From what I have seen from the various cameras I don't see much of a case against the officers. I might be wrong but my gut says not much comes from this.
 
Your last two videos are embarrassing biased. The helicopter footage is dramatically edited to make it look like they paused and then started shooting again. The autopsy video is highly speculative.

The full helicopter video shows everything start to finish.



Isn't administrative leave normal procedure while they investigate police shootings? From what I have seen from the various cameras I don't see much of a case against the officers. I might be wrong but my gut says not much comes from this.


There's nothing more revealing about the video you posted. An unarmed guy who had 20 rounds fired at him, most of which after he was incapacitated. The cops are clearly to blame for this. They didn't have to fire that many shots and they didn't have to wait 5 minutes until after the last round was fired to "go see if they were ok". Sounds like these were young, inexperienced cops who dropped the ball, which resulted in an unnecessary death.
 
There's nothing more revealing about the video you posted.

Well firstly its not deliberately edited to mislead. Secondly it shows Clark jumping fencing to avoid the cops. A report was made of a suspicious male trying to break into cars. The helicopter spotted Clark jumping fences and guided the cops on the ground to his location. Clark then ran from the cops and ignored commands to show his hands. Video clearly shows the cops believed he had a gun.

Were mistakes made, obviously, was there any malicious intent or crime committed by the cops? The court of public opinion based on biased media coverage is not often wrong.
 
Beyond me how anyone can see that video and then try to use it to defend those cops. If they are so scared that they need to kill in that situation they shouldn't have become police officers. Them shooting 20 shots at someone 9 feet away and then waiting 5 minutes before seeing if he's "Ok" is very telling too...
 
Well firstly its not deliberately edited to mislead. Secondly it shows Clark jumping fencing to avoid the cops. A report was made of a suspicious male trying to break into cars. The helicopter spotted Clark jumping fences and guided the cops on the ground to his location. Clark then ran from the cops and ignored commands to show his hands. Video clearly shows the cops believed he had a gun.

Were mistakes made, obviously, was there any malicious intent or crime committed by the cops? The court of public opinion based on biased media coverage is not often wrong.

Nor was the one I posted. It was edited for brevity, which happens all the time. And the fact that you clip wasn't any more illuminating suggests it was the right call.

- Jumping the fence to run away isn't grounds for killing a suspect. You continue running and chase them down.
- Whether or not they believed he had a gun was obviously BS combined with a bit of racial profiling (black guy running, he must be armed!). They simply presumed that the fact that he had something in his hand (a cellphone) was a gun, which they then used as an excuse to pump him full of 8 or so rounds.
 
Beyond me how anyone can see that video and then try to use it to defend those cops. If they are so scared that they need to kill in that situation they shouldn't have become police officers. Them shooting 20 shots at someone 9 feet away and then waiting 5 minutes before seeing if he's "Ok" is very telling too...

Plus it was dark, plus they were scared and making assumptions (the wrong ones at that).
 
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Beyond me how anyone can see that video and then try to use it to defend those cops. If they are so scared that they need to kill in that situation they shouldn't have become police officers. Them shooting 20 shots at someone 9 feet away and then waiting 5 minutes before seeing if he's "Ok" is very telling too...

Range is probably around 20 feet. Maybe you're not qualified to watch the video and come to any sort of conclusion.

I am not defending the cops nor am I making wild statements about racial profiling or suggesting the cops deliberately murdered Clark.
 
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Range is probably around 20 feet. Maybe you're not qualified to watch the video and come to any sort of conclusion.

I am not defending the cops nor am I making wild statements about racial profiling or suggesting the cops deliberately murdered Clark. I

I don't know, I have a internet connection and a working computer, what more do I need to qualify to watch it :lol:? You did say maybe though, so maybe I am? He's about 2 1/2 body lengths away from them by my reckoning (looking at it again now at 1:36), so yeah it's more than 9 feet, but still very close.

My conclusion based on watching that video is that those 2 cops are cowards. And that conclusion is way more qualified than your completely unqualified questioning of my qualification to have an opinion.
 
I don't know, I have a internet connection and a working computer, what more do I need to qualify to watch it :lol:? You did say maybe though, so maybe I am? He's about 2 1/2 body lengths away from them by my reckoning (looking at it again now at 1:36), so yeah it's more than 9 feet, but still very close.

My conclusion based on watching that video is that those 2 cops are cowards. And that conclusion is way more qualified than your completely unqualified questioning of my qualification to have an opinion.

That's all you really need here - two eyes and a bit of objectivity.
 
I don't know, I have a internet connection and a working computer, what more do I need to qualify to watch it :lol:? You did say maybe though, so maybe I am? He's about 2 1/2 body lengths away from them by my reckoning (looking at it again now at 1:36), so yeah it's more than 9 feet, but still very close.

My conclusion based on watching that video is that those 2 cops are cowards. And that conclusion is way more qualified than your completely unqualified questioning of my qualification to have an opinion.

There is a lot more info in the video to scale off. The home has a double garage which are usually 18-19 feet wide. The distance between the officers and Clark was more than the width of the garage by a few feet. First shot was fired from around 22 feet away.
 
Like I said before, eagle-eyed police able to identify a gun, at night, on the run, from 22 feet away.

Supercops.
 
A nearly 17 minute video. The most damning part is the cops turning off their audio towards the end so their comments, once they were discussing what really happened, couldn't be held against them.

 
Interesting quote from the Baton Rouge chief after firing one of the officers who murdered Alton Sterling.

“Our police officers are held to a higher standard. Fear cannot be a driver for an officer’s response to every incident,” Paul said Friday. “Unreasonable fear within an officer is dangerous.”
 
A nearly 17 minute video. The most damning part is the cops turning off their audio towards the end so their comments, once they were discussing what really happened, couldn't be held against them.

It could be held against them if it was actually against department rules. Obviously the rules need changing on body cam usage. The cop on the previous page had his cam on charge in the car when the shooting occurred.
 
Interesting quote from the Baton Rouge chief after firing one of the officers who murdered Alton Sterling.

“Our police officers are held to a higher standard. Fear cannot be a driver for an officer’s response to every incident,” Paul said Friday. “Unreasonable fear within an officer is dangerous.”
Yep. It gets people killed.
 
It could be held against them if it was actually against department rules. Obviously the rules need changing on body cam usage. The cop on the previous page had his cam on charge in the car when the shooting occurred.

Whether it is or isn't they should've left it on to preserve as much information as possible. This will only make them look like they were trying to conceal the substance of what happened when they reviewed the shooting amongst one another.
 
Well firstly its not deliberately edited to mislead. Secondly it shows Clark jumping fencing to avoid the cops. A report was made of a suspicious male trying to break into cars. The helicopter spotted Clark jumping fences and guided the cops on the ground to his location. Clark then ran from the cops and ignored commands to show his hands. Video clearly shows the cops believed he had a gun.

Were mistakes made, obviously, was there any malicious intent or crime committed by the cops? The court of public opinion based on biased media coverage is not often wrong.

:lol: He was running so we shot him. Basically. I'm unsure how you think the cops have anything to stand on (assuming you do, here).
 
Whether it is or isn't they should've left it on to preserve as much information as possible. This will only make them look like they were trying to conceal the substance of what happened when they reviewed the shooting amongst one another.

There is more than enough video evidence to see exactly what transpired.
 
:lol: He was running so we shot him. Basically. I'm unsure how you think the cops have anything to stand on (assuming you do, here).

Shots were fired because they he didn't listen to commands to show his hands and they believed he had a gun. Or maybe you missed the office say "gun" in the video?

It would be interesting if one of our US cop posters could chime in on this one.
 
Shots were fired because they he didn't listen to commands to show his hands and they believed he had a gun. Or maybe you missed the office say "gun" in the video?

It would be interesting if one of our US cop posters could chime in on this one.

Which was obviously wrong and a mistake on their part.
 
No doubt but if a cop is screaming show your hands its best to comply.
And even then you can still end up shot, never mind the fact that it's easy for you to say what should have be done and how while you're a million miles removed from such a charged and instinctual situation.
 
Initial statement of the Sac PD right after the shooting was that Clark advanced towards the officers with his arm extended. Autopsy show he was shot in the back though. I suppose they could have missed with their initial shots, he turned, and the rest went into his back.
 
Initial statement of the Sac PD right after the shooting was that Clark advanced towards the officers with his arm extended. Autopsy show he was shot in the back though. I suppose they could have missed with their initial shots, he turned, and the rest went into his back.

That's precisely what looks like happened. If you pause it around the 1:27 mark, you can see that he's already down and they keep shooting another 11-12 rounds at him.

 
The way he moves until he is on his hands and knees doesn't look he is hit before that to me, then he suddenly collapses (at the 7th shot by my count)... and then they shoot another 13 times after he collapses.
 
I think there's enough there that these cops will not be charged.

No way they get charged. Hopefully some good will come from this though. New rules on body cams and microphones, and hopefully better training for cops.

I am personally amazed the Clark case is getting so much attention yet the shooting on the previous page which is far more controversial is barely getting a mention. The effect of social media and hysteria warps the reality on many of these incidents.
 
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I'm not a policeman and I live in the UK so this seems a terrible waste of life to me but I wonder how fair it is to live in a country where guns are so prevalent and then blame the police all the time for what is a natural consequence of that fact.
 
Interesting quote from the Baton Rouge chief after firing one of the officers who murdered Alton Sterling.

“Our police officers are held to a higher standard. Fear cannot be a driver for an officer’s response to every incident,” Paul said Friday. “Unreasonable fear within an officer is dangerous.”

Thats the key part, that I don't think people have been grasping. Also that certain stereotypes perpetuate such fear
 
I'm not a policeman and I live in the UK so this seems a terrible waste of life to me but I wonder how fair it is to live in a country where guns are so prevalent and then blame the police all the time for what is a natural consequence of that fact.

Very good observation. The rush to blame the police is wrong IMO. When a police officer acts with malice or makes bad decisions when they had time and options to do something else, then yes they should be heavily scrutinized. The Clark incident is tragic but I don't see too much wrong with the police response considering all the evidence I have seen.

The incident a couple of pages ago when the cop shot a guy with his shorts around is ankle is more news worthy for me. He had other options and could clearly see the perpetrator was unharmed.
 
Shots were fired because they he didn't listen to commands to show his hands and they believed he had a gun. Or maybe you missed the office say "gun" in the video?

It would be interesting if one of our US cop posters could chime in on this one.
I dont want to make a judgment call on this one because even based on the videos available i can't clearly see what Clark was actually doing right before the shots were fired. So I'm still on the fence on this.

IF he was in fact facing the officers and was raising his "gun" towards them, then yes it would be totally justified. When it's that dark and he had been evading the cops and verbal commands then it does not matter that it turned out to be an iphone. You don't take chances with that shit.

If Clark had the phone in his hand but was facing away from the cops then the justification becomes much more questionable since he was not an immediate deadly threat. The cops had distance and cover and could have given more verbal commands to show his hands or drop the weapon.
 
I dont want to make a judgment call on this one because even based on the videos available i can't clearly see what Clark was actually doing right before the shots were fired. So I'm still on the fence on this.

IF he was in fact facing the officers and was raising his "gun" towards them, then yes it would be totally justified. When it's that dark and he had been evading the cops and verbal commands then it does not matter that it turned out to be an iphone. You don't take chances with that shit.

If Clark had the phone in his hand but was facing away from the cops then the justification becomes much more questionable since he was not an immediate deadly threat. The cops had distance and cover and could have given more verbal commands to show his hands or drop the weapon.


Thanks!

Personally I don't think there is evidence to suggest the cops acted irresponsibly, even if they did. No one wants to shoot and kill another human being. Hopefully they genuinely thought he had a gun, was facing them and made a motion with his arm/hand.