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United States News Title: How Should Police Stop A Knife-Swinging Laquan On PCP? In the latest high-profile racial railroading of a white policeman for obvious political reasons, it has taken authorities over a full year to decide to charge Chicago cop Jason Van Dyke in the fatal shooting of black 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. The obviousness of the racial/political theater here is largely due to the fact that the timing of the ridiculous charge first degree murder being suddenly announced after all these months, so transparently coincides with the sudden FOIA public release of a police dashcam video of the shooting which, to the untrained eye, looks pretty bad. The video in question has been in the possession of the authorites this entire time. If it was a bad shoot, especially if so bad as to amount to first degree murder, they should have charged him long ago, apart from the racially ginned-up public and media hysteria wrought by release of the video, no? As for allegations about the incident itself, there are some gray areas, and some clear-cut lines. Officers were attempting to apprehend McDonald, who was later determined to have had PCP in his system, after he had been rampaging around the area and using a knife to not only break into cars and other property, but also slashed the tire of a police car when an initial attempt to arrest him failed just moments before he encountered Van Dyke and other officers. The video shows that McDonald was not walking away from the officers, as many are insisting; he was walking briskly abreast of them and turning toward them(4:45), his left hand inside his pocket and swinging the knife in his right hand. Most police officers are trained on the 21-foot rule(also known as the Tueller Drill), the distance at which an officers reactionary gap (the time it takes the officer to recognize the threat, reach, draw, aim, and fire on the subject) puts his own life in jeopardy from a subject with an edged weapon. Heres a very good demonstration of the 21-foot rule: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_KJ1R2PCMM It has been proven over and over again (unfortunately not only in training drills but in many cases where officers have been murdered/gravely wounded) that an agile subject with an edged weapon can suddenly, as rapidly as 1.5 seconds, close a distance of up to 21 feet to fatally stab/slash a victim, even kill or seriously wound a trained police officer armed with a gun. Thats LESS time than it takes an officer to recognize the threat, reach, draw, aim, and fire on the subject the reactionary gap. 1.23 seconds is the fastest closing time of the 21-foot distance measured. I played the video over and over at various speeds, and the taser wires are visible well before McDonald shows any kind of reaction(indicating that the taser may not have functioned immediately or properly), and he actually turns toward the officers(4:45) as he walks briskly abreast of them with the wires attached, swinging the knife in one hand, with his other hand in his pocket. Then, it looks like the gunfire is what brings him down, because you can see dust/debris kicked up as the rounds hit the concrete around/under McDonalds body when he falls. If Van Dyke believed the taser did not function, it can be argued that he legitimately perceived McDonald (who had just slashed a police cars tire with the knife) to be an imminent deadly threat within the 21-foot reactionary gap. That perception might not mean to a jury (Graham v. Connor) that Van Dyke necessarily HAD to shoot McDonald, but it would definitely mean hes not guilty of murder. The 21-foot rule has come under scrutiny and criticism in recent years/months, and I predict it will (as stand your ground, as misapplied as it was, in the Zimmerman case) be the centerpiece of this case. Not guilty. Oh, and by the way, as for the number of shots Van Dyke fired, the answer is that once the decision to use deadly force is made, the number of shots is really moot although we all know that the public, media, and jurors can imagine that there can somehow be some kind of excessive force beyond deadly force. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 26.
#2. To: no gnu taxes (#0)
It's a crying shame that Illinois no longer has capital punishment
A pay raise - promotion ! I'm having a hard time ... driving around these death wish crazies --- during the day - night !
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