I don't know if violently is the correct word as the article describes it as growling, barking, and advancing. In other words threatening behavior.Gil Hamilton wrote:This is insane.
We have two scenarios.
The cop entered the yard and an 11 year old golden labrador that is unusually amicable in temperment is in the yard. This dog is cleared to work with preschoolers, which require a dog to be well behaved above and beyond what a normal dog would be, because preschoolers are notorious for grabbing dogs in sensitive spots (ears, tails, genitals) and yanking. Somehow, against all breed standards and the fact that this particular dog must literally have no violent bones in its body due to the work it does, the dog acts violently towards the cops, justifying it being shot in self-defense.
Still waiting on that evidence that this cop is a liar, or makes poor decisions. If you had that then along with your evidence then I'd be willing to take the side of the "cop is wrong" crowd. Until then. My position is that there isn't enough evidence to punish the police officer.
Misinterpreting the dogs behavior is a reasonable possibility. However, what do you think the law says in regards to the use of deadly force against animals or people?The cop entered the yard and an 11 year old golden labrador that is unusually amicable in temperment is in the yard. The cop misinterprets the dogs behavior or is an asshole or for whatever reason shoots the dog for reasons other than self-defense. The cop then either lies about it or reports his misconception that the dog was aggressive.
In most states it says something like "you may use deadly force if you reasonably believe that it is necesssary to protect yourself or another from serious bodily harm or injury." The reasonable standard is derived by what a reasonable person would do under the same situation. Now, all we have is the officers testimony that the dog approached him in a threatening manner. So, would you shoot a dog that approached you in a threatening manner?
No, the reason why it is impossible is because you and others apparently have a very bias understanding of how the law works. Police officers have the same rights as you and I when it comes to being accused of a crime. Your evidence is interesting, but it is only one part of the story. Like I said before, I'm assuming this officer is one with integrity. So, until you can show that he is lying then a reasonable doubt exists.The reason why this conversation is impossible is that SVPD and Kamikaze Sith are so biased in opinion that they won't even acknowledge that it is extremely unlikely that the dog that was described could possibly ever become aggressive and attack someone, even though this is a dog that has tolerated hordes of four and five year olds almost certainly grabbing its sensitive bits for years without the dog so much as snarling, even to the point that they are informing an animal biologist who specialized in behavior (an thus has an excellent idea what it takes to get a particular animal to attack) that HE is wrong here. That takes some serious balls.
Wrong. The burden of proof is on you. It is always on the prosecution which is who you are in this discussion.The fact that the burden of proof is on the cop to demonstrate that shooting the dog was somewhow justified slips by as does the fact it is EXTREMELY unlikely that this particular dog would act in the way they insist it must have is irrelevant. Cops have done something, so they must always be right, always.
People don't trust police for a multitude of reasons, and yes I agree this is one of them. Except, from my point of view you don't trust police because you are simply bias of how the justice system works.Kamikaze Sith, you often have complained that people just don't seem to trust cops and won't give cops the benefit of the doubt. This is why. Not just the news article, but yours and SVPDs response. How can ANYONE trust someone given broad authority over their other citizens when they won't even concede the POSSIBILITY that that authority can and has been abused?
You keep saying it "went psycho" I don't think it went psycho. If it went psycho then I'm sure the officer would have said something more than "Barking, growling, and began to advance".Here, you are so much in Blue Wall mode that you won't even concede the POSSIBILITY that the cop was lying or did something wrong, but rather are being so bold to claim that an elderly lab that is so even tempered that it is safe to work with small children must have just spontaneously went psycho one day in the face of all past behavior and its very biology. You are the answer to your own complaint, many people don't trust the police because they believe the police are more loyal to each other than the truth and any cop will cover anothers ass rather than see him punished for wrong doing and here you and SVPD, pushing forward an extremely unlikely scenario SOLELY on the basis that it protects the cop without even so much as admitting the possibility that the cop could have been wrong.
From my point of view people don't trust the police because they have a distorted view of what standards police should be held up to. You basically want to lower it from a beyond a reasonable doubt to undefined probabilities.
Again, I say that had this dog been a person armed with a knife then this wouldn't even be a story. Instead we get a story because it involves a emotional button for many people. Man's best friend.