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April 27, 2011, 04:08 AM | #1 |
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A really ugly shooting from Philly...
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/lo...uced_coma.html
Short form: a guy is transporting an unloaded handgun into his house from his car and then back out. Off-duty cop from across the street freaks out, charges in, guy with the unloaded gun runs into his own house, cop kicks his door open and shoots him. Guy is fighting for his life right now. The guy who was shot has no criminal record, gun was 100% legal *and* unloaded. Cop is claiming the guy shot pointed it at the cop, witnesses disagree. This is by far not the first weirdness of this sort coming out of Philly of late. Tom Gresham recently commented that police trainers are having cops shoot in practice on the "go command" of "GUN!". This looks...bad.
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April 27, 2011, 06:17 AM | #2 |
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Hard to tell who's in the wrong here. If the dude pointed an empty gun at the cop he brought it on himself, if the cop was just being trigger happy than that family ought to get a nice settlement. Hopefully the dude pulls through.
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April 27, 2011, 06:25 AM | #3 |
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Way I look at it, we cannot really comment because we do no know if it was pointed at the officer or not. One of those situations where you HAVE to be there.
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April 27, 2011, 06:54 AM | #4 |
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We do not know all of the facts but there are numerous witnesses who say the cop's side of the story is untrue.
Having said that, I object to the following comment: "if the cop was just being trigger happy than that family ought to get a nice settlement." I have a very big problem with this line of thinking. It implies a sort of cavalier indifference to the prospect of a wrongful shooting. When a cop shoots someone unjustifiably he is put on "administrative leave". He still collects his pay and will still collect a pension when he retires. On many cop talk forums it is a common joke that cops get a paid vacation when they shoot someone. I find it distasteful in the extreme. If the cop is found to be in the wrong he does not pay any of the "nice settlement". It is the taxpayers who pay! Would you care to tell the children of a deceased father that the world is right because even though they don't have a daddy anymore they got a "nice settlement"? Somehow I doubt they would be satisfied with that. There is a pattern of behavior among some PPD officers wherein they routinely violate citizen's rights to carry firearms. There have been several recent incidents of unlawful behavior on the part of PPD which could have ended in this type of tragedy. The fact is that the mayor and city council as well as hierarchy of the PPD have an anti-gun agenda. The law is clear in PA that open carry is legal yet there are cops who disregard that fact. This incident may be the beginning of the end of that type of unlawful behavior on the part of some PPD officers. I hope so. |
April 27, 2011, 06:59 AM | #5 |
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If it happened as reported, if the officer opened the door and entered that person's home and shot the gentleman, there will be problems in Philly.
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April 27, 2011, 07:13 AM | #6 |
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What if a (legally) armed citizen was sitting in his lawn chair, and sees his neighbor carrying a shotgun from his house to his car (or vice versa). So at this point the citizen rushes across the street, and follows the neighbor who is now running back inside his house. The armed citizen shoots the man, who cannot defend himself because the shotgun was unloaded.
DO YOU THINK A NICE SETTLEMENT WOULD BE ALL THAT THE SHOTGUN GUY AND HIS FAMILY WOULD GET? No, because the armed citizen would lose his CWL, and probably go to jail. What about our cop friend here? Will he lose his badge? Will he go to jail? Chances are he'll get some vacation time with pay, and maybe a stern talking to. If the guy pointed the gun at the cop he was in the wrong. He started the situation. But I'm giving him the benifit of the doubt, thinking he is smart enough to know that pointing any gun at any cop is a stupid idea. I suspect the root of the problem here is that police officers in big(ger cities than mine) are taught and trained that any civilian with a gun is a bad guy, and is up to no good. Sent from my Droid using Tapatalk
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April 27, 2011, 07:20 AM | #7 |
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I understand some guys take their job seriously but if there wasnt any threats or no hostages the guy shoulda been left alone. I dont know what philly law is but around here off duty means off duty as in they can assist on duty officers but they cannot make arrests or use their gun unless the threat is on them and the way it sounds the guy didnt do anything wrong. What Id like to know is if the off duty officer announced if he was an officer or if he just yelled "stop" as he was pulling a gun. I wont even go into him kicking down the guys door. Until I know if he announced that he was an officer cause the tables could be turned if he didnt and the home owner would be in prison instead of the officer being on "administrative leave". But like someone else said we need to know the TRUE story first.
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April 27, 2011, 07:26 AM | #8 | |
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Quote:
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April 27, 2011, 07:42 AM | #9 |
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"If he pointed a gun at a cop he deserved to die" - really? Let's see here. You're on your own property. You're not threatening anybody. Your gun is empty. Some guy acting like what you percieve as a lunatic rushes you with a drawn gun from across the street. In a last-ditch move you try and make him go away by pointing a loaded gun. Ooops, it doesn't work, you get shot.
Umm...yeah, whose fault is that? The assailant! Who's the assailant? Think. Who's the assailant? Hint: It ain't the guy that got shot.
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April 27, 2011, 07:44 AM | #10 | |
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Quote:
Anyone can yell "NYPD" and bust in a door. If for no apparant reason some guy without a uniform does so and then knocks down a door, I stand that the homeowner should have the right to defend himself. ANYONE can say those 4 letters. The point here is that officers have a SOP, and that is what is supposed to protect them from us. That is why their SOP is so important. Sent from my Droid using Tapatalk
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Si vis pacem, para bellum Last edited by LinuxHack3r; April 27, 2011 at 07:51 AM. |
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April 27, 2011, 07:49 AM | #11 |
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Sounds like a fair bit of stupid on both sides, but the cop seems to have gone way over the line pursuing the guy into his house to shoot him. Calling for (on duty) backup and getting some more info about the situation would have been a bit more reasonable IMHO.
Guns taken out of the house (in view of neighbors) to go to the range should be in some kind of case or bag, even if it's clearly a gun. At least that's how I do it. |
April 27, 2011, 08:04 AM | #12 |
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Even if the truth lies somewhere between the two stories, since when does an officer leave a shooting victim?
Why did a friend drive him to the hospital instead of someone calling an ambulance? I am in total agreement with Jim March on this one.
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April 27, 2011, 08:16 AM | #13 |
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I don't think the dept lawyers will be there for this officer as these actions seem to be not under the scope of his employment. he can't get upset and shoot someone because they run away from him. that is speculation but being offduty and charging into someone else's home isn't warranted. this officer let his emotions get the better of him. the gun was unloaded, so the victim pointing the firearm at the officer is extremely questionable at best. there was obviously some sort of verbal communication from the offduty cop and the victim. I doubt it was gun drawn, commanding voice stating to drop the weapon and I'm a cop. I can wonder about some of the conversation they had with the street in between them. try to be optimistic: call for backup and have a buddy with you. this article is very troubling but that's why there is a process. this is just an article, much more sifting is needed. I don't think anyone wants this man to die...
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April 27, 2011, 09:08 AM | #14 |
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LinuxHack3r: your not getting what Im saying. Im saying if the officer didnt announce he was an officer(ie. he didnt say freeze NYPD, AND show a badge) the homeowner could have easily shot the off duty officer not knowing he was an officer and he would be thrown in jail as the "bad guy" even though he didnt know he was an officer. I can tell you if I was the homeowner and some crazy guy came running after me with a gun I would have done the same thing, ran inside and put cover between me and the madman untill I could properly defend myself( ie load the gun in my hand or get a different gun). So like I said if he didnt announce he was an officer how does the homeowner know that he actually was an officer? And if he would have shot the off duty officer he would be labled as a cop killer and thrown in jail, even though the officer never annouced himself as such.
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April 27, 2011, 09:13 AM | #15 |
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Do I have this right? These two men are neighbors living across the street from one another?
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April 27, 2011, 09:42 AM | #16 |
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Wow! What a mess.
This is precisely why I transport my guns either in:
I don't HAVE to do this. But I know the area I live in has a high percentage of gun hating busybodies. Even though OC legal. Pretty sad.
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April 27, 2011, 09:47 AM | #17 |
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Because threads like this can VERY quickly flash over into acrimonious exchanges between members, I'm going to go ahead and issue a warning right now.
Keep it civil. If anyone doesn't know exactly what I'm asking, PM me.
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April 27, 2011, 09:52 AM | #18 |
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I'm sorry, and no disrespect to LEOs out there, but isn't the behavior of the officer a bit...odd? I mean, I realize in some locales cops are required to respond to any crime, even when off duty, but, what was the crime here? And further more, would you bust down someone's door with your off duty piece to go after a "dangerous" ,man with a gun or given that no one had been threatened yet, wait for back up? I hope some of our LE members join in here, because from where I sit, the officers behavior seems screwy at best.
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April 27, 2011, 10:00 AM | #19 | |
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Quote:
The story itself, is poorly written, though. It is hard enough, attempting to establish a timeline, based on the author's jumping around, and it is nearly impossible to infer any probabilities from it, either. Although, the most interesting part, was the IAB statement that they take off-duty shootings, "very, very seriously." |
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April 27, 2011, 10:18 AM | #20 |
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If I was transfering an unloaded firearm into my house from my vehicle and, what I percieve as a nut or BG, comes charging at me, I may very well point my unloaded firearm anyway. But in reality since I have a CCW when I am transferring weapons (unloaded) I'm always loaded up with a sidearm. This is too bad. Very unfortunate for both parties. I don't like to advertise my weapons when transporting them to and from my vehicle but I don't necassarily think it's wrong either. I just don't think it's very smart.
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April 27, 2011, 10:20 AM | #21 |
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I do think the cops judgement would be in question here.
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Look I like glocks. I've owned Sig's, HK's, 1911's, S&W, and other fine pistols but Glocks have been a favorite for me. Handguns without safeties are not dangerous. Idiots are dangerous. |
April 27, 2011, 10:49 AM | #22 |
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Open carry is legal in PA, too, so as written the cop should have had no cause to assume a crime was in progress, nor to act as he did.
There was a thread a while back, though, about a PPD interoffice memo instructing Philly officers to stop and verify status of open carriers, with an underlying intent to discourage OC. |
April 27, 2011, 10:52 AM | #23 |
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but the article says that the officer fired twice.
He pursued the man accross the street durring the alleged "gun pointing", then allegedly identified himself as a cop and fired AS he was attempting to get into his own home. He then ran to the door, kicked it open, located the man again and shot him. Even if we separate this into 2 parts: the shooting outside, and the shooting inside; the cop is still wrong to shoot a fleeing suspect presumably in the back as he tried to enter the home he originally came from. He's then operating against SOP by not calling in the shooting as soon as he can, not waiting for backup, forceably entering a residence, then shooting a man. Bad all around. Like Jim said, this looks... bad. In my mind, these are the cop's thoughts as the events unfolded. "We should move in the bed set next before the dresser... Holy crap. Is that a gun? BAD GUY WITH A GUN! Gotta get him. Hey! You! You with the GUN! Hey, don't you run, I'm a COP! He's tryin to get in that house. Armed man breaking in- shoot him! Hey! What if whoever lives here is home? Gotta save them. Kick the door down. Hey! Stop! Bam Bam Bam! It's okay folks. It's all okay- I saved you all... ... Wait... what?" ~LT
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April 27, 2011, 11:12 AM | #24 | |
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Somebody above mentioned problems in Philly if the shooting wasn't justified. I immediately thought this would be a racial issue. The victim isn't a non-white minority and so maybe that aspect will be curtailed.
What I don't understand is that if the police officer's action were legit, why did he run away? That doesn't sound right. Quote:
Interestingly, this link has another witness, again after the fact, but has Taylor staggering around his front yard after being shot. http://www.philly.com/philly/news/lo...Frankford.html So Britton sees her boyfriend shot and just runs after the shooter, leaving her boyfriend to bleed and the boyfriend (Taylor) gets up and goes walking around his yard, showing off his wound to his neighbor, saying he is going to die, but doesn't ask for help and tells the neighbor that he was shot by the officer...and nobody seemed really interested in calling 911 for help until Britton chased the officer back to the house of his origin. Curioser and curiouser.
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April 27, 2011, 11:23 AM | #25 |
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"... the Internal Affairs bureau and that the department takes shootings by off-duty officers "very, very seriously."
Implying, of course, that shootings by on duty officers aren't taken seriously...? Lessee here... somebody across the street with a gun in their hand yells at me... he's not in uniform... I run for cover into my home... he comes through my front door, uninvited, with gun in hand... ... no matter how you slice it, a scenario like this can't end well.
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