tnf wrote:I would agree that the second tasering (I didn't realize he did it a second time) was overboard. The initial tasering, however, was still justified IMHO (read my post at the end of 7.)
Yea, I hadn't watched the full video (only the first one posted) until now. It gives a better idea of the situation and the attitudes and tension involved.
To me, after watching it, the officer seemed to be escalating the situation from the beginning, instead of making an attempt to calm the situation down. A peaceful end to the stop was never possible from the way he approached it in the beginning.
And again, I'm not saying she wasn't in the wrong -- I'm not even saying that the bitch didn't deserve it -- but that it is not right for a cop to use violent force unless it is necessary. And in this case, the officer's language and actions were a textbook case of how to make any confrontation escalate.
In my job, it would be a nice luxury to not have to be polite, to be able to immediately antagonize any of my users, knowing that I have the upper hand and have nothing to lose by it. But I obviously can't do that because I would face repercussions from it.
Cops have a hard time and a hard job and I know this. But IMHO, when they project their fears and bad experiences on every citizen they approach, and make situations worse with no attempt to negotiate the situation, they should be reprimanded internally by their superiors and shown that the right way to handle paranoid, frantic people is not by increasing their apprehension, raising the chances of a violent encounter.
But since things like this get tons of bad publicity, it turns into a black-and-white matter of who was right and wrong and, inevitably, the final decision is that the criminal was wrong, which means the officer was right, and things like this continue to happen, and more and more officers wind up creating the violent situations they should be working to avoid.
A good friend I've had since high school has been a cop for about 5 years now, and the training they are receiving today is becoming more and more like military training -- anyone they pull over is considered the enemy for purposes of the officer's safety; and this is in a tiny town in the country. So what happens is, every peaceful citizen in that community is being treated like the most hardened criminal in that community -- i.e., the rationale that the actions of one bad apple have ruined it for the rest of us, and that is okay.