unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Kind of why I'm saying it's hard to prove, isn't it.
I don't know why you're saying it. But it would also be hard to prove that he was under an alien influence and was compelled to pull the trigger. How about we stay in the realm of what's supported by evidence and not stray into the weeds of made up stuff?
I said "forget the inscriptions for a moment" in that instance because it is a minor aspect of this whole thing getting a disproportionate amount of attention in the thread.
It's not, though. It's what I was responding to in your post replying to me when I starting commenting on this part of the thread. Your entire reply consisted of two things: Brailsford's reinstatement in order to be able to medically retire and the inscriptions. I took no issue with your criticism of the reinstatement.
Other parts of our back and forth include your madman who harasses a cop every day for twenty years, and your hypotheticals about t-shirts and other firearms not used on duty. Mildly perplexing.
As I've explained before, the hypothetical cop harasser was to illustrate the irrelevance of an officer's subjective motivation when determining the necessity and reasonableness of a use of force. It was intended to explain the withholding of the inscriptions from the jury. The t-shirts and other guns were questions posed to you because your opening response to me on this topic indicated your disapproval of the withholding of the inscription from the jury, so they were probing how far removed from the incident you would go when seeking to include the inscriptions. It's all perfectly relevant to our discussion of the inscriptions and whether or not they should have been disclosed to the jury.
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, I've already acknowledged that I'm unsure about its admissibility in terms of character or establishing possible, but hard to prove, premeditation (not to specifically kill Shaver, but to take advantage of an opportunity to shoot someone; probably hard to prove against a policeman).
Even if Brailsford
did have a desire to kill someone,
it still doesn't matter. All that matters is answering the objective question of whether some amount of force was necessary from Brailsford's perspective, and whether the force used was reasonable
at the moment it was applied.
- The hallway approach looked unsafe and seemed to put everyone at risk.
- The orders were confusing and the increasingly agitated reaction to Shaver's attempts to follow them didn't make sense to me.
- That the jury was intentionally kept in the dark on some details does not look good in the public eye, regardless of legal correctness.
- It doesn't look look good that the sergeant later moved out of the country.
- It doesn't look good that the shooter was (quietly?) brought back into the force long enough to be released on a PTSD paycheck.
- One drop in the bucket in many avoidable cop-on-civilian incidents in America leading to increased public frustration with law enforcement.
I agree with everything on this list, with the exception of the emphasized entry.
Last edited by HollisHurlbut (2020-05-02 00:51:00)