In opening statements in the joint trial of a current and a former police officer in Aurora, Colorado, defense attorneys said the two followed department protocol.
Archived page, if you're paywalled or region-blocked.
Rosenblatt was fired in 2020 after texting “ha ha” in response to a picture sent to him by other officers, one of whom appeared to be administering a chokehold near a memorial for McClain.
We can and should, but through the prison system. I don't see why we can't help people become better citizens instead of better criminals if we're locking them up and paying for it anyway.
McClain was unarmed when he was stopped Aug. 24, 2019, by officers responding to a report of a suspicious person wearing a ski mask and waving his arms. He was carrying a plastic bag with three cans of iced tea in his left hand and his phone in his right hand. He was listening to music on headphones and didn’t initially respond when officers called to him.
Not a comment on this case, but I saw a couple episodes of Cops recently and it seemed standard for people they were arresting to resist and immediately shout they can't breathe, so there's a chance cops have become a bit numb to it. Not saying the policing methods are correct, just a thought that 'the boy who cried wolf' might be aligning.
The show literally lets the police they ride with have final say on the editing, so there is never anything that makes cops look bad, or makes their baseless assumptions look anything but correct.
Even if the person is actually innocent, which, IIRC, has lead to at least one lawsuit against the TV show for portraying them in a far worse way than the situation was in reality and making them look guilty to boot, when they were in fact innocent, all to make the cops look good and justified.
Especially considering it's really only the US where this seems to happen an awful lot. I don't hear about deaths in the process of arrest in, say, the UK or Germany or Japan with nearly the same regularity that we do with almost EVERY SINGLE PD here in the US.
Yes, but the users you replied too, clearly thinks the innocent one who was killed here, IS the boy who cried wolf.. that's really what they are implying by referencing the cops episodes (which is strange cause I too watched cops growing up, as many of us did, and this was not a common thing said by anyone on the show.. not even on live PD... ). No, that user is just trying to paint an evil picture that this innocent person was making up their claims of they couldn't breath and therefore deserved it...
They don't show you anything that doesnt justify the cops behaviors/suspicions.
Because they always give the actual cops they are working with final say in the editing, so the show could keep its access to the police for more shows.