kx250rider
New member
Holy shit would you retards get the fuck off the racist piss pot, fuck man. Yea I'm a ca cop and yea I would have done the same fucking thing whether he was white, black or brown. I would have done it different than him though. As soon as he went to get in his car i would have waited for him to leave then returned to the issue at hand but thats all hind site and I wasn't there.
The pos ngrs that I deal with everyday in my area get talked to and treated a lot different than the black people do in the rich parts of town. Everyone has a dialect they respond to best. Working the shit whole ghetto parts of town all those fucks respond to is getting your point across cause they don't wanna listen. You not being a cop and only having csi and law and order to base your understanding of the law on is what's wrong. You see it on tv or the news and its never the full story. I'm civil as fuck but cops are not liked especially in ca and where I work so shits handles as fast as possible so we can get the fuck out without stirring the pot.
I'm not k9 but if you killed a police dog you can guarantee his partner is going to put holes in you. Take this same exact situation and take the fact that he was white away from it. The story just got colder. Now take the fact he was a police officer away. "Someone shot a dog?" Hmm "oh well". That's exactly how shit would be right now.
I'm happy to hear from a cop, and I'm glad you said you'd likely have done things differently if you had been there. My point is that the suspect (who was acting cooperatively by placing the dog in the car, then returning to be cuffed per directions of the officers), was not given the chance to recapture the dog, which even had his leash trailing behind him! Obviously the suspect was not a flight risk, and was not exhibiting combative or threatening behavior, so why didn't the officers simply let go of him so he could stop the dog? So simple!!!!
I'm not a cop, but I have absolutely and on many occasions, been confronted by dogs of all sizes and demeanors when I was a TV repairman. In 46 years of life, I've never been bitten, and I've even gone into places where "attack dogs" were. I believe that the cop who shot, was simply scared of dogs. Period. Police officers MUST learn to deal with all situations without using deadly force, with one exception, and that's to stop an opposing deadly force.
And yes, I do believe there is rampant racism in many police departments, including the Hawthorne PD and the LA County Sheriff's Dept. I personally know several officers who are racists at heart. No matter what they commit to when taking the oath of being sworn onto the force, a belief is a belief, and it's there festering in the background. I have no idea what if any role that played in this case, but it's a possibility since the suspect had filed racism complaints (whether they were real or made-up). One more point I will make, is that racism is NOT the same thing as profiling. If I were a cop, I'd notice a Black teenager roaming around in a $300 car in an affluent community, and I'd notice a white yuppie in a BMW roaming around South Central LA. I'd also notice a white preppie driving around in a lowered Cadillac with purple fuzzy dice on the mirror, and I'd notice a Hispanic driving a car with surf racks on it and a DC sticker. Not because of color, but because it's a puzzle with a missing piece, and it would be reasonable to assume that the missing piece could be something I needed to address as an officer.
I understand that being a cop is a tough job, and believe it or not after all this I've ranted about, I appreciate the hard work of the police community, and I don't know what we'd do without you. But as with any other sector of society, there are bad apples, and we need to be willing to accept that, and to remove those bad apples from positions where people can be harassed under the color of authority, and where dogs get shot. I hold a valid CCW permit in Texas, and I guarantee you that as a civilian, they'd snatch that away from me so fast that my head would spin, if I even unholstered a weapon on a city street due to a dog approaching.
Charles