Norade wrote:A quota is always going to be worse than actually dealing with the officers that you're having issues with. If you can't be bothered to actually deal with the people causing issues and instead have to create a blanket policy then you're not doing your job of ensuring the officers under your watch are doing their jobs.
How do you know that he is not dealing with them? How do you know that it's going to be worse?
You'll notice that it's not actually a punishment dumbass, did you even read the article I posted?
Yes, because the
disciplinary process is not yet finished. This calls into question whether it is proper to revoke his pay at all.
So it's now a totally different thing to boot people who are attempting to comply just because you were trying to arrest them? Bullshit, assault is assault regardless of the fact that you're a cop or not. The police don't need these protections and should have to show why the use of force was justified in each case instead of it being assumed that they always need it.
Yes, as a matter of fact it is. Arresting someone is totally different from assaulting them. All you're doing is saying "it's assault because I say it's assault." There are no special protections in place, and it is not "assumed" that force was needed; justification already is always required. What isn't done however, is that we do not instigate a "guilty until proven innocent" witch hunt against officers that use force.
A) Good thing you're defending the 'polcie' and not the police force that kept Mantler on with pay after kicking somebody in the face while on duty.
Good thing you're nitpicking minor typos. Like.. "Civillian", see below in your own post, asshole.
From the person who can't use quote tags correctly...
Yes, clearly the issue here is whether or not I've made errors with quote tags.
Could you possibly be a little more desperate to score points?
So that explains why a civilian would have been held in cells once he was caught and this asshole was allowed to go free. Wait, no it doesn't.
I've already explained why. Using excessive force in an arrest is not the same as assaulting them. Had this constable simply gone up to someone and kicked them in the face out of the blue, he
would be in jail. All you are doing is trying to dismiss the legal difference between excessive force in an arrest and an outright assault by your own say-so, and since you're not part of any judicial body you don't get to do that.
They would tend to indicate a level of force that would need to be justified and not something that should be considered as a standard.
So what? No one said it should be. All force has to be justified.
You'll also note that Mantler has yet to be charged for this and it happened in August 2010 so justice hasn't been done in this case giving yet more reason to doubt the sincerity of the local police when they say they have our interests at heart.
Because you've just arbitrarily decided it should have been taken care of by now?
Yes they do, these sorts of situations aren't acceptable and stricter controls on officers would mean that officers would be less likely to commit such acts. You haven't answered the question still. If you were a repo man, would you feel safe when officers can pull you from your vehicle and beat you without being charged?
I don't need to answer the question because you cannot generalize from this happening this one time, to it happening to repo men in general from police in general. You'll further note that your own article assigns 49% of the blame to the repo man, so he's anything but blameless. The law already prohibits pulling someone from their vehicle and beating them for no reason. In cases where it is necessary to make a lawful arrest then the repo man's feelings don't matter; he shouldn't have been breaking the law and refusing to be arrested.
Obviously these situations aren't acceptable, but there is no demonstrated need for unspecified "stricter controls", especially when you do not understand that uses of force must already be justified individually, and you're unable to grasp the concept of due process. "Unacceptable situations exist" is not an excuse to implement ever-stricter rules until perfection is achieved in any field. In this field you would quickly find that many police officers tired of having their procedures dictated by the ignorant and the determined-to-be-outraged who think that every impropriety by every officer means unspecified new rules are needed for officers everywhere, and quit. The remainder would be unable to do much of anything.
Mantler is the example of a violent cop and the officer involved in a hit and run is another dangerous officer. Our police force is 156 regular officers and 2 of 156 is 1.2%, our rate of violent crime is less than 1000 for a city with a population of 106,000 which means that I would be violently assaulted 0.9% of the time. I'm also only using cases I know of so the numbers may be even worse for the police.
So you're asserting that these officers both assault every single person they come in contact with? Your thinking is massively flawed, to say the least.
Kelowna's Wiki Page
If even a quarter of those cases are justified that means roughly 3.5% of our officers are complain worthy and at least two of them Const. Geoff Mantler and Const. Steve Conlon (who was given only community service for punching a pregnant woman in the face) are known to be violent.
No, it means no such thing since more than one complaint can be against a single officer.. and more to the point, if 1/4 of the complaints are justified that would be very unusual. Finally, not all complaints are equal. Rudeness is not equal to excessive force, which is not equal to killing someone unjustifiably. Just because an officer has made a mistake that results in a justified complaint does not somehow forever taint him. Some complaints are minor and the officer will learn and not repeat the mistake.
In any case, you still are not justifying extrapolating from the actions of a few individuals to police in general. You are a bigot; you are doing exactly what people who fear blacks in general because some blacks are criminals do.
Shit like this is why I'm kind of glad it isn't legal to go around punching people in the crotch. You'd be able to track my movement from orbit from the sheer mass of idiots I'd leave lying on the ground clutching their privates in my wake. -- Mr. Coffee