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Louisville police officers cleared of criminal charges in Breonna Taylor death


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4 hours ago, bodga said:

Sounds reasonable to me lets  be  honest  many of these  people  getting shot are  up to no  good  anyway, drug  dealers , wife  beaters, if they were half  decent  most of this  would  never  happen.

Evidence that walker was any of those things?

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This concept of acceptable collateral damage really needs to be revisited because the other option will simply be in the form of a mass of angry protesters influencing their state and local politicians to defund the police.  The pendulum needs to swing back toward the middle.

Edited by connda
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22 minutes ago, donnacha said:

There's no point even asking. He clearly doesn't understand the basics of how these investigations work. The prosecutors, all Democrat in Louisville, would have been absolutely desperate to prosecute and get a police scalp to calm the mob if it had been in any way legally feasible.

Can you name the special prosecutors in this case. No malice intended. Just want to confirm. 

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12 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

Can you name the special prosecutors in this case. No malice intended. Just want to confirm. 


Special prosecutors do not head investigations. The regular prosecutors are who we are talking about here. They are usually selected by the mayor and their career progress is usually tied to his patronage.

A special prosecutor is similar to a special guest star on a TV show. They are usually trusted public figures, brought in for one investigation, usually to head off accusations of political or racial bias. They do not have to have any prosecutorial experience. Their job is oversight, and to sign off on the process, but not to set it.

 

Edited by donnacha
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4 minutes ago, donnacha said:


Special prosecutors do not head investigations. The regular prosecutors are who we are talking about here. They are usually selected by the mayor and their career progress is usually tied to his patronage.

A special prosecutor is similar to a special guest star on a TV show. They are usually trusted public figures, brought in for one investigation, usually to head off accusations of political or racial bias. They do not have to have any prosecutorial experience. Their job is oversight, and to sign off on the process, but not to set it.

 

Stand corrected, there were special prosecutors in this case and they are career officials with impeccable record and in character. 
https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/breonna-taylor/2020/09/12/breonna-taylor-case-what-we-know-special-prosecutors/3461595001/

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1 hour ago, Sujo said:

A couple of points.

 

The grand jury only hears evidence from the prosecutor. No defence allowed. The prosecutor stated walker shot the officer but the defence after seeing the report questions the ballistic report as non conclusive, but cannot tell the grand jury.

Do you have a link for your post, the op clearly states Sargeant Manningly was shot in the thigh. 

Something not right here. 

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The police broke their doors down, and they had no drugs in the house. The only reason she was targeted was the fact that she was involved with a drug dealer two years prior. It was a spectacularly ignorant raid, on the part of the police. Most police departments in the US are overly militarized, and it leads to these kinds of unnecessary police slayings. 

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1 minute ago, Smigel said:

Do you have a link for your post, the op clearly states Sargeant Manningly was shot in the thigh. 

Something not right here. 

I didnt say he wasnt shot. I said the defence said the ballistics report was inconclusive that it was walkers bullet.

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1 minute ago, Eric Loh said:

Stand corrected, there were special prosecutors in this case and they are career officials with impeccable record and in character. 
https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/breonna-taylor/2020/09/12/breonna-taylor-case-what-we-know-special-prosecutors/3461595001/


I do not understand your point. The insinuation in this thread has been that the prosecutors chose not to listen to witnesses who would have proved the police officers guilty, but you are now saying how impeccable they were.

No one with any sense doubted, even for a moment, that any investigation in a high-profile case like this would be thorough and honest. Equally, no one with sense attributed an unfortunate death to any sort of racism on the part of the officers, so, it was very obvious that they would not be found culpable for her death.

Anything else is just dancing around and trying to spin this whole thing into something it isn't.

 

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8 minutes ago, donnacha said:


I do not understand your point. The insinuation in this thread has been that the prosecutors chose not to listen to witnesses who would have proved the police officers guilty, but you are now saying how impeccable they were.

No one with any sense doubted, even for a moment, that any investigation in a high-profile case like this would be thorough and honest. Equally, no one with sense attributed an unfortunate death to any sort of racism on the part of the officers, so, it was very obvious that they would not be found culpable for her death.

Anything else is just dancing around and trying to spin this whole thing into something it isn't.

 

You made the insinuation that "The prosecutors, all Democrat in Louisville, would have been absolutely desperate to prosecute and get a police scalp to calm the mob if it had been in any way legally feasible". My point is that they are career prosecutors of good character and shouldn't be accused in the manner you described. I don't even know they are Democrats if that's really true. 

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19 minutes ago, donnacha said:


This case is not about "most police departments in the US". It is about one department and three particular police officers, all real human beings.

You may well feel that a reckoning needs to come, and it would be convenient if this case were what some are trying to make it, but you should think logically about what happened, otherwise you build your grand revolution on a foundation of lies.

The police knocked and identified themselves as police. The boyfriend, by his own admission, heard them but decided not to open the door. Instead he grabbed his gun.

The police then broke down the door because that is what they do when the occupants choose not to open the door. The boyfriend discharged his weapon. This was a poor idea. The police fired back, unintentionally killed the girlfriend.

The police acted correctly in a difficult and frightening situation. You, in the same situation, would probably have followed your training too. If we are now going to pretend that this incident represents all that is wrong with American policing, that is an evil misrepresentation that will affect the lives of actual good cops and undermine good police officers throughout the country.

 

An evil misinterpretation of police, huh? And a no knock warrant is NOT evil? Not a miscarriage of justice? Not an over reach? Sorry, but I have friends who have been subject to police abuse, undeservedly. It is not about one department. It is about alot of police departments in the US, who are militarized, overzealous, and not trained to take someone down without fatal force. I realize when confronted with a man with a gun, force has to be used. But examine the facts, first. The police did not respond, when asked who was there. Period. Police slaughtering civilians in the US is completely out of control. 

 

Taylor was in bed with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker III, who said he heard banging at the door just after midnight. Concerned there might be trouble, he grabbed his gun, which his attorney said he legally owns. They yelled to ask who was at the door but got no response, he said afterward. The officers used a battering ram to break in the door, and Walker then fired one shot at who he believed were intruders. Mattingly, who was first through the door, was shot in the leg. He and two other officers -- Hankison and Cosgrove -- then returned fire throughout the home. Walker was unharmed, but Taylor was shot multiple times and died in the shooting. "Somebody kicked in the door and shot my girlfriend," Walker said in a 911 call.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/23/us/breonna-taylor-timeline/index.html

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6 hours ago, donnacha said:

Despite all the lies spread in the immediate aftermath, witness testimony proved that the officers correctly executed their search warrant and only fired after being fired upon.

The problem, this year, is that every fatality involving the police is being cynically exploited to inflame passions and advance a particular narrative before anyone bothers to check the facts. The actual truth of an individual incident no longer matters to the Democrats because they believe the entire system to be systematically racist - even if these particular police are innocent it doesn't matter because all police are guilty.

Luckily, the court system does not work that way (yet). A lot of these prosecutions are set in motion for political reasons and, even in cases of obvious wrong-doing such as George Floyd's death, prosecutors are setting charges so high that no court will be able to convict on that basis.

Bringing Murder One charges suits a prosecutor's political needs but will ultimately undermine trust in the justice system and result in more chaos in Democrat cities, and more black businesses getting burned down by white BLM protesters, when the charges are inevitably thrown out.

 

 

All of what you wrote is true. And is what to expect when a justice system becomes totally politicized. Truth, facts, honesty and treating people with fairness and the truth doesn't matter to politicians. Which is why democracies only ever work with fully independent justice systems.

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5 hours ago, donnacha said:


It is tragic that the shooters don't understand how each incident like this nudges tens of thousands of votes towards the Republicans.

The Democrats think that the chaos will help them, and I understand their thinking, but I have a hunch they are miscalculating the cumulative effect of this stuff.

 

 

Shooters. Democrats. Not same same. Not acting according to some joint agenda.

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