weemadando wrote:Uraniun235 wrote:...especially when the standard for opening fire is "well it looked like he might have had a weapon and was within eyesight of me"?
The guy has a weapon raised and is clearly in a position where he's trying to conceal himself either to evade police or ambush them.
The police fucked up a lot of stuff on this raid, and the officer coming out after the fact stating that he didn't feel threatened is an indictment of events. But the fact remains that on hearing police raiding his property his first response was not
a: immediately throw yourself on the ground out of the possibility it might be the police
Or
c: freeze in place and turn to face the source of the noise out of confusion.
It wasn't even
b: turn and attack
Unless he was standing in a hallway with a golfclub when the raid happened, then he established himself in this position with intent to do ... something. Even when it was completely obvious that it was goddamn SWAT.
If I'm woken in the middle of the night by my door being kicked in, you can bet your arse that the first thing I'm doing is moving to protect my family. But unlike some paranoid loons (or internet tough guys) when I hear someone shouting "POLICE! SEARCH WARRANT!" or similar, my reaction isn't going to be: "IT MUST BE A PLOY BY CRIMINALS! CASTLE DOCTRINE!
CASTLE DOCTRINE!" Instead it's likely a more profanity filled version of: "well this is probably some kind of mistake, which we can all sort out later." And anyhow - it's not like taking a swing at a cop is going to help me out in either case.
But hey, I guess that makes me some kind of soft liberal pinko.
You know what I see when I look at that video again?
I see a bunch of guys approaching a house
in the dead of night, armed and armored like they're soldiers. I see them knocking, then a bunch of shouting that,
even knowing what they are saying, sounds a lot like "polllaaa! Nuhhhh unnnent! Polllaaa! Nuhhh unnnent!"
And we've got the audio at the camera. They shout their gobbeldygook
twice in rapid succession and bust in the door.
Now, you know what I see? A guy, in his underwear, startled in the middle of the night, grabbing a golf club because sports equipment is the
de facto home defense tool when a firearm isn't to hand, getting busted in upon and shot dead
while he is trying to evaluate the situation.
I'll be frank, there's an old ax sitting behind me at my computer. If I hear loud yelling at the door and the sound of someone trying to break it down, my first instinct is going to be to
grab that ax if I'm at my PC.
Here's the sequence of events from the inside of the house.
[*]
BANG! BANG!
[*]
Unintelligible shouting that
could be "Police! Search Warrant! Police! Search Warrant!," or it
could be the rallying cries of a bunch of tough guys about to break in my house and rob me blind.
[*]
Door smashing in
[*] More shouting, pop out to see what the fuck is going on.
[*] Gunfire, now the guy's dead.
Frankly, from the perspective of the person being raided, with these tactics there's no way to tell a police raid from a home invasion until after the police have had their raid and pacified the place.
It also makes me wonder - do the police
really consider the possibility that the meager amount of drugs that could be flushed in the time it takes for them to be quite certain that the occupants know they're the police to be worth the risk of a violent confrontation that ends with someone being shot? If it's such a big deal, why not turn off the water?! If the amount of drugs on-premesis is enough that it can be disposed of with a single flush, they're not worth fucking raiding in the first place.