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To: rlmorel

Even police officers that are trained to ‘shoot to kill’ can have religious and moral objections to such actions, and would, if confronted with such a scenario, most likely aim to wound and unarmed suspect.

In this particular instance, the officer himself was wounded, having had his eye socket shattered, and possibly unable to aim well enough to avoid killing his attacker.

The media will not explore this avenue, they will say only that he was shooting to kill............................


783 posted on 08/21/2014 6:26:54 AM PDT by Red Badger (If you compromise with evil, you just get more evil..........................)
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To: Red Badger

I’m gonna keep harping on this: regardless of his _intent_, the objective _fact_ is the first FOUR shots were “wounding” shots. In addition, a shot HAD been fired even before that. Brown had AMPLE WARNING of imminent lethal harm if he did not halt his attack ... yet he continued until he had his brains blown out.


786 posted on 08/21/2014 7:21:46 AM PDT by ctdonath2 ("If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun" - Obama, setting RoE with his opposition)
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To: Red Badger

The point I was trying to make is that there is no entity or police force out there that trains people to shoot to wound (with the possible exception of Special Forces who might have specific needs to do just that for intelligence ends, and even then I am only guessing at that)

In this case, I have to believe the officer was not shooting to kill, he was most likely just shooting to hit any part of the man advancing on him and it didn’t even enter his mind what part, be it arm, foot, or face that he might hit.

If he could make choices like that in that compressed time frame, he is a far more capable person mentally than I could hope to be.

That said, I did have a situation once where I was doing about 50 mph in an MG Midget in the left hand lane, and came over the crest of a hill to see a car stopped there about a few yards in front of me.

Everything kind of stopped in my head, and I was thinking slowly, deliberately and clearly “I am going to hit this car. I can’t stop. I can’t go into the left lane as there are cars there. I can only go up over this six inch curb onto a narrow concrete apron. It’s my only choice.”

So in the blink of an eye, I cut the wheel, smashed over the curb and came to a screeching stop with the guard rail a few inches from my door on my side, and the cars stopped in the left lane a few inches off my right door. Not a scratch on the car.

But the thing I remember most was seeing out the corner of my eye, the posts holding up the guard rail, painted white, in slow motion going by...whiff...whiff...whiff...whiff. There was no noise of course, but when I look back on it, it was as if my mind was making its own sound effects. All this took place in the span of about three seconds.

I have always wondered if that is what it is like for great athletes like Larry Bird or Ted Williams, where things slow down like that.

Or what it may be like for someone like this cop who had to make the choice and pull the trigger on a huge man rushing at him. So you may be right. But my commonsense tells me it probably happened so quickly that it might be huge pieces of what was going on that he didn’t see at all. He might remember the grease stains on the front of the fat guy’s shirt, but never even saw the faces of people watching directly behind the guy rushing at him or cars whizzing by on the street just inches away.

Strange how the human mind works.


797 posted on 08/21/2014 7:41:09 PM PDT by rlmorel ("Anyone who will shift their stance so fluidly in the pursuit of support isn't worth supporting.")
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