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Howard July 30th 05 03:26 PM

On Sat, 30 Jul 2005 13:23:26 +0100, "M. J. Powell"
wrote:

In message ,
writes
On Tue, 26 Jul 2005 15:43:49 +0100, "M. J. Powell"
wrote:

In message ,
writes
If all he was guilty of was not renewing his visitors permit,then he
shoudn't have ran.He should have stopped regardless.He would either be
walking around in limeyland now or on his way back to
Brazil,whatever.Things are very tense over there,he should have known
that.He was stupid and the cops did the right thing.

What would happen in America if two cops held a man down on the ground
while the third cop shot him 8 times?


They'd be clered for "acting in good faith."


Report in the paper yesterday the police somewhere in the US fired 120
shots at an unarmed driver trying to get away.

Mike
M.J.Powell


That was slightly over a month ago, the city was Compton located in
Los Angeles County, California. The agency was Los Angeles Sheriff
Department. The initial response to this by the Sheriff Department
was that the deputies failed to coordinate their response with each
other, failed to follow training/accepted practices for such a
situation and in general blew it.

FWIW, several Southern California law enforcement agencies are
struggling with how to respond to threats from suspects in vehicles;
1) it is difficult at best to determine if they are armed and 2) the
vehicle itself constitutes a weapon. So, somebody who is driving a
3000# 'weapon' and also has a firearm and is in a 'mighty ****ed off'
state of mind does become a real threat to public safety. Sometimes
law enforcement does truly blow it, try to remember that for every
largely publicized error there are hundreds of traffic stops, warrants
served and arrests made that happen without incident.

[email protected] July 30th 05 04:06 PM

Pay no heed to the Ace? (DxAce) I doubt very much that DxAce believes I
mess around with my dog.I always read and highly respect everything
DxAce says.My sentiments exactly,DxAce.
cuhulin


[email protected] July 30th 05 04:11 PM

I have never messed around with dope or drugs in my life and I never
will either.I reckon I am too dumb for that nonsense.Hey,I am naturally
crazy,I don't need any dope or drugs to help me out with that.
cuhulin


M. J. Powell July 30th 05 04:12 PM

In message , Howard
writes
On Sat, 30 Jul 2005 13:23:26 +0100, "M. J. Powell"
wrote:

In message ,
writes
On Tue, 26 Jul 2005 15:43:49 +0100, "M. J. Powell"
wrote:

In message ,
writes
If all he was guilty of was not renewing his visitors permit,then he
shoudn't have ran.He should have stopped regardless.He would either be
walking around in limeyland now or on his way back to
Brazil,whatever.Things are very tense over there,he should have known
that.He was stupid and the cops did the right thing.

What would happen in America if two cops held a man down on the ground
while the third cop shot him 8 times?

They'd be clered for "acting in good faith."


Report in the paper yesterday the police somewhere in the US fired 120
shots at an unarmed driver trying to get away.

Mike
M.J.Powell


That was slightly over a month ago, the city was Compton located in
Los Angeles County, California. The agency was Los Angeles Sheriff
Department. The initial response to this by the Sheriff Department
was that the deputies failed to coordinate their response with each
other, failed to follow training/accepted practices for such a
situation and in general blew it.


I hope it was in a rural area. The idea of 120 rounds flying about in a
populated place is frightening.

FWIW, several Southern California law enforcement agencies are
struggling with how to respond to threats from suspects in vehicles;
1) it is difficult at best to determine if they are armed and 2) the
vehicle itself constitutes a weapon. So, somebody who is driving a
3000# 'weapon' and also has a firearm and is in a 'mighty ****ed off'
state of mind does become a real threat to public safety. Sometimes
law enforcement does truly blow it, try to remember that for every
largely publicized error there are hundreds of traffic stops, warrants
served and arrests made that happen without incident.


Brit practice is to follow until something happens. A helicopter is
useful. If the driver is known to be armed then an ARV (Armed Response
Vehicle) is called in. The occupants have to get permission from a
senior officer to open the locked box and carry the firearms.

Mike
--
M.J.Powell

[email protected] July 30th 05 04:14 PM

M.J.Powell,I am not the clown.
cuhulin


[email protected] July 30th 05 04:21 PM

Here in Jackson,Mississippi,if something like that happens (and believe
y'all me,sometimes something similar to that does happen here in
Jackson) the cops are laid off with pay while an investigation goes on
via the Jackson Police Department.Same with the Hinds County Sheriff's
Department.More or less,it is the same procedure all over U.S.A.I kind
of hate to say it,but there are some crooked cops all over U.S.A.and the
World.I personally know some local Jackson area cops and they are A OK.
cuhulin


[email protected] July 30th 05 04:52 PM

120 shots? OKayyyyyyy.
cuhulin


Howard July 30th 05 05:11 PM

On Sat, 30 Jul 2005 16:12:25 +0100, "M. J. Powell"
wrote:

snip
Report in the paper yesterday the police somewhere in the US fired 120
shots at an unarmed driver trying to get away.

Mike
M.J.Powell


That was slightly over a month ago, the city was Compton located in
Los Angeles County, California. The agency was Los Angeles Sheriff
Department. The initial response to this by the Sheriff Department
was that the deputies failed to coordinate their response with each
other, failed to follow training/accepted practices for such a
situation and in general blew it.


I hope it was in a rural area. The idea of 120 rounds flying about in a
populated place is frightening.

It was an urban area and yes, even folks not in the lines of fire
were frightened that it happened.

FWIW, several Southern California law enforcement agencies are
struggling with how to respond to threats from suspects in vehicles;
1) it is difficult at best to determine if they are armed and 2) the
vehicle itself constitutes a weapon. So, somebody who is driving a
3000# 'weapon' and also has a firearm and is in a 'mighty ****ed off'
state of mind does become a real threat to public safety. Sometimes
law enforcement does truly blow it, try to remember that for every
largely publicized error there are hundreds of traffic stops, warrants
served and arrests made that happen without incident.


Brit practice is to follow until something happens. A helicopter is
useful. If the driver is known to be armed then an ARV (Armed Response
Vehicle) is called in. The occupants have to get permission from a
senior officer to open the locked box and carry the firearms.

Mike

That is what our law enforcement agencies do also, wherever possible.
Often, the suspect will stop and force a confrontation in a highly
populated area which leaves the officers little choice in their
response. The case cited above is NOT typical of law enforcement
response where the goal is apprehension of the suspect with minimal
risk to the general public. FWIW, I am familiar with Compton and can
offer that if patrolled by the Brits they would NOT keep their
firearms in a lock-box.

Howard

dxAce July 30th 05 05:14 PM



Howard wrote:

On Sat, 30 Jul 2005 16:12:25 +0100, "M. J. Powell"
wrote:

snip
Report in the paper yesterday the police somewhere in the US fired 120
shots at an unarmed driver trying to get away.

Mike
M.J.Powell

That was slightly over a month ago, the city was Compton located in
Los Angeles County, California. The agency was Los Angeles Sheriff
Department. The initial response to this by the Sheriff Department
was that the deputies failed to coordinate their response with each
other, failed to follow training/accepted practices for such a
situation and in general blew it.


I hope it was in a rural area. The idea of 120 rounds flying about in a
populated place is frightening.

It was an urban area and yes, even folks not in the lines of fire
were frightened that it happened.

FWIW, several Southern California law enforcement agencies are
struggling with how to respond to threats from suspects in vehicles;
1) it is difficult at best to determine if they are armed and 2) the
vehicle itself constitutes a weapon. So, somebody who is driving a
3000# 'weapon' and also has a firearm and is in a 'mighty ****ed off'
state of mind does become a real threat to public safety. Sometimes
law enforcement does truly blow it, try to remember that for every
largely publicized error there are hundreds of traffic stops, warrants
served and arrests made that happen without incident.


Brit practice is to follow until something happens. A helicopter is
useful. If the driver is known to be armed then an ARV (Armed Response
Vehicle) is called in. The occupants have to get permission from a
senior officer to open the locked box and carry the firearms.

Mike

That is what our law enforcement agencies do also, wherever possible.
Often, the suspect will stop and force a confrontation in a highly
populated area which leaves the officers little choice in their
response. The case cited above is NOT typical of law enforcement
response where the goal is apprehension of the suspect with minimal
risk to the general public. FWIW, I am familiar with Compton and can
offer that if patrolled by the Brits they would NOT keep their
firearms in a lock-box.


Yeah, Compton ain't Ozzie and Harriet land, that's for sure.

dxAce
Michigan
USA



[email protected] July 30th 05 05:45 PM

A few years ago,the idea of an old elderly guy in Northern limeyland
whom was defending his life with his Firearm agains't burglers (that
married Irish woman in Bognor Regis,England emailed me news about
that,she hates limeyland) was amazing too,wasen't it? He went to gaol.
cuhulin



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