Gamers/Streamers Swatting Megathread

  • Thread starter FoRiZon
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All 3 people, the officer and the two idiots playing CoD, are responsible for this. The officer directly ended the life of the innocent man, while one gamer thought it was funny to create a fake hostage situation and the other probably knew it was a fake address and literally let someone die for giggles.

He didn't let someone "die for giggles". I doubt he expected the guy to actually call the SWAT on the other person, let alone kill him. That said, he still is to blame since all of this was in the realm of possibilities.

If the exchange had gone something like "my address is Fake Street 1234" and only later did the other guy threaten him with calling the SWAT on him, things would be much different: he gave out an address, but didn't know what could have happened with it. The former case makes him a blatant 🤬, the latter makes him an unlucky idiot.

I don't know what you really mean by this line but why only the "lower classes"?

Speaking about my country, to be honest. In Argentina, only the lower classes (or better said: a specific population of the lower classes) has a huge hatred of the police. The only group which has a similar dislike of police are those who defend these people from their political position. And of course, musicians that come from these lower classes.

It isn't nice when people are literally forced against a wall and display their belongings only because they look a certain way. With the current government it's been like that for two years now.
 
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In the UK, guns can be owned legally and illegally. Handguns were banned around 20 years ago.

In the UK, legal gun ownership only extends to bolt, lever or pump action rifles and shotguns, and even so, you have to supply evidence of a need for them, such as sporting or hunting. Semi automatics are limited to measly 22. caliber rifles. In other words, guns are mostly off limits to civilians, a result of punishing the many for the actions of the few. Interestingly, this same logic of abolishing something that can and does cause harm to the public is not applied to things like alcohol, even though alcohol related deaths are far more prominent than firearm induced ones, even in the US.
 
He didn't let someone "die for giggles". I doubt he expected the guy to actually call the SWAT on the other person, let alone kill him. That said, he still is to blame since all of this was in the realm of possibilities.

If the exchange had gone something like "my address is Fake Street 1234" and only later did the other guy threaten him with calling the SWAT on him, things would be much different: he gave out an address, but didn't know what could have happened with it. The former case makes him a blatant 🤬, the latter makes him an unlucky idiot.
Oh, he knew what was to become of the information. Check my video on page 3.
 
They are power hungry bullies getting pay back for their childhood.(my opinion)

This is such a stupid stereotype. I had a wonderful childhood, as did my brother and we love our jobs in Law Enforcement. Last I checked (late 2016, I think) there were over 1 million sworn LEOs so to have an opinion like that you must've talked to at least the majority, right? So tell me, how many members of the Law Enforcement community are you close enough to that they've shared memories and thoughts of their childhood?
 
He didn't let someone "die for giggles". I doubt he expected the guy to actually call the SWAT on the other person, let alone kill him. That said, he still is to blame since all of this was in the realm of possibilities.

If the exchange had gone something like "my address is Fake Street 1234" and only later did the other guy threaten him with calling the SWAT on him, things would be much different: he gave out an address, but didn't know what could have happened with it. The former case makes him a blatant 🤬, the latter makes him an unlucky idiot.
Because if one gives out an address they should expect cookies to be delivered to their door? No, I don't buy that. If you give out your address on these games, the likelihood it will be used for anything other than nefarious purposes is about as likely as you winning the lottery. Maybe they won't use it to SWAT you, but you have compromised your own information. In this case, the idiot compromised someone else's information and got that person killed. I wonder how far the digital trail can go. I wonder if whatever platform/game they were on can be backtraced by the authorities to get to these fools who thought this would be funny. 1 was caught, the gamers by the names Miruhcle and Baperizer remain at large.
 
I've never fully understood the justification that an officer is allowed to gun down another human being (even if they are unarmed), "because they feared for their life"; "because they have a family to go home to".

I'm sorry, but in my opinion, once you sign on that dotted line (and especially as a member of SWAT), you lose that "privilage" (might not be the correct word).

The Captain of a sinking ship doesn't get to bail out into a life raft because "they fear for they're life."

Perhaps it's different for civilian pilots, but military pilots aren't allowed to rip the Ejection Seat cord anywhere. If they can't reasonably gaurentee that the plane will crash in a non populated area, they are required to continue piloting the damaged craft until they can guide it towards an unpopulated area, even if that means they go down with the plane.

There are certain occupations that, again once you sign on that dotted line, there is an expectation that you will maintain certain responsibilities and discipline, even if it kills you.

Anyone who joins a military and gets deployed receives at least some type of "interrogation training", the more elite and specialized the unit, the more intense the training is. The whole point of this training is that if you are captured, you don't simply get to spill the beans because "you fear for your life." No, as a member of the military, it is your sworn duty to keep senstive and classified information to yourself, even in the face of eminent death.

For these reasons, these sacrifices, are the one of the major reasons we hold people who volunteer for these kinds of positions in high esteem.

So this notion that, "well, I feared for my life, so I terminated another life" is complete horse 🤬 It is, for all intests and purposes, a cop out.

In the military, even a regular ass GI - you don't get abandon your post because you "feared for your life." And if your abandoning of your post because you feared for you life ends up getting someone else killed...Mark my words that will be a short and swift court martial that leads to either execution by firing squad or most if not all of the rest of your life in the brig.

When I was in boot camp, one of the things we learned about is escalation of force. Did you know that when soldiers participate in UN Peace Keeping operations, they are not allowed to shoot their weapons until "the other guys shoot first". Even if there is 10 people charging at you with rifles, you're not allowed to start shooting until they do. You are never allowed to initiate a firefight, you can only return fire. And even then, if there is an investigation into the incedents after the fact, you have to be able to reasobly prove that those 10 people were in fact shooting at YOU, and not something else that happened to be in your general direction. In any military situation, who shoots first is a massive deal, with massive ramifications.

So is this where we're at? We hold soldiers who "police" foreign people in foreign countries to a higher standard than the officers who police our own citizens at home?

Last year at the Rememberance Day ceremony in my town, there was a unit of SWAT guys patrolling the perimeter (I asked one of them why we needed SWAT guys at a rememberance day ceremony in our Canadian town of less than 200k people...it was for everyone's safety in light of the shooting that had taken place in Ottawa last year). Upon watching these guys for most of the ceremony, I was shocked by how unprofessional they were at handling their riffles. Not working in fire teams, setting the riffle down to write on a note pad, not keeping the barrel pointed down at all times (at one point, one guy rested his riffle between his legs, with the barrel pointed straight at his balls) - my old sergeants would have completely lost their 🤬 on these guys.
 
Possibly unpopular opinion, but I would support executing the swatter, as I doubt anything else will properly deter more cringy "pranksters" from following in this guy's footsteps.
 
We hold soldiers who "police" foreign people in foreign countries to a higher standard than the officers who police our own citizens at home?

We do? I can't recall seeing any massive protests when a soldier kills a completely innocent civilian (apart from Vietnam), however people go crazy if some guy waving a gun around gets shot.

As for the rest, there is certainly a worrying lack of training provided to police and swat forces.
 
Let's just not allow law enforcement officers to legally carry firearms, and then if an officer discharges one in the midst of an altercation, they are in clear violation of the law.
 
This is such a stupid stereotype. I had a wonderful childhood, as did my brother and we love our jobs in Law Enforcement. Last I checked (late 2016, I think) there were over 1 million sworn LEOs so to have an opinion like that you must've talked to at least the majority, right? So tell me, how many members of the Law Enforcement community are you close enough to that they've shared memories and thoughts of their childhood?
That's why I put (my opinion) next to it...
And none. Only officer I ever really talked to we talked about the benefits mentally and physically of Marijuana ironically after he made sure I had none.

I have my experience of BS stops that lead to me getting arrested. I've talked about this before.
 
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Let's just not allow law enforcement officers to legally carry firearms, and then if an officer discharges one in the midst of an altercation, they are in clear violation of the law.
I know that you are being sarcastic, but that is the wrong approach for that. What they need to do instead is retrain them to not think militaristic.

The issue isn't that police have weapons, to begin with. It is their training that is the issue. Just take a look at the Ferguson incident. Police are over equipped and they acted accordingly.

That said, if the need arises where a SWAT team is necessary, then call in the National Guard. Oh, wait, they can only be controlled by the governor of the state.
 
That said, if the need arises where a SWAT team is necessary, then call in the National Guard. Oh, wait, they can only be controlled by the governor of the state.

That's not a very good idea, you want to use the national guard for domestic law enforcement? While the guard under times of peace is not under the posse comitatus act the spirit still applies. I don't think we'll ever see a governor pull a stunt like that.
 
I know that you are being sarcastic
Indeed, argumentum ad absurdum was the intent.
The issue isn't that police have weapons, to begin with. It is their training that is the issue. Just take a look at the Ferguson incident. Police are over equipped and they acted accordingly.
That is an issue, and I agree wholeheartedly that it is something that must be resolved, but another issue is that these incidents are exactly that, incidents, and do not represent the majority of situations.
That's not a very good idea, you want to use the national guard for domestic law enforcement? While the guard under times of peace is not under the posse comitatus act the spirit still applies. I don't think we'll ever see a governor pull a stunt like that.
Yeah, he picked up on my use of sarcasm and I have the nagging suspicion he was joining in with that comment. The "Oh, wait" was a clue.
 
Let's just not allow law enforcement officers to legally carry firearms, and then if an officer discharges one in the midst of an altercation, they are in clear violation of the law.

This is actually how it works in countries like New Zealand. Your average police officer is not armed. If they go up against someone who is, they have a specialist Armed Offenders squad that they call. Some vehicles have a rifle or handgun in a safe, but they are uncommon.

On the other hand, the actual incidence of firearms among the general populace in NZ is low, handguns are practically non-existent, and the general mindset of the citizens does not lead to them pulling a weapon at the slightest provocation.

NZ is not the only country in the world to do this, but it's the one that I have personal experience with. Anecdotally, I'm a lot more comfortable being pulled up by police in NZ where they aren't armed than Australia where they are.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...rms-and-it-works-well/?utm_term=.362321e99a60

While not allowing police to carry firearms would obviously never work in a country like the US with the mindset and firearm ownership that it has, that's not to say that in other countries such a thing can't and doesn't work just fine. Perhaps that's a clue that this isn't entirely all about the police either. The characteristics of the population that they're assigned to "protect" are just as important, and it's kind of a chicken and egg thing.

If the population feels under assault by authorities, then they're going to want weapons to protect themselves. If they have weapons to protect themselves, then the authorities are going to want to be one step up on that. Etcetera, etcetera. And you end up in 2018 with both sides armed to the teeth and hyper-vigilant for anything that might require a lethal response.

It's a failure to de-escalate at a societal level. And the citizens are never going to take the first step, because while we can address them as a group in terms of behaviour they are a bunch of individuals. On the other hand, if the police become more approachable and less of a threat to the citizens, then perhaps citizens feel less of a need to come out shooting instead of having a discussion.
 
On the other hand, if the police become more approachable and less of a threat to the citizens, then perhaps citizens feel less of a need to come out shooting instead of having a discussion.
That's just it, the police are approachable. Certain sorts of individuals hear about apparent unprovoked altercations that lead to an officer shooting down an supposed innocent, or see people like Dennis Franz or Ice T portraying harass cops on TV and assume this is the norm.

I've been pulled over, I've even been told to hold both hands out the window and open the door from the outside. Do you know what I did? Exactly what I was told to do. I wasn't in possession of anything I ought not be and either wasn't doing anything wrong or didn't do anything that would incite unnecessary aggression. It would seem I've never been shot dead by an officer with a chip on their shoulder as a result of these actions.
 
That's just it, the police are approachable. Certain sorts of individuals hear about apparent unprovoked altercations that lead to an officer shooting down an supposed innocent, or see people like Dennis Franz or Ice T portraying harass cops on TV and assume this is the norm.

I've been pulled over, I've even been told to hold both hands out the window and open the door from the outside. Do you know what I did? Exactly what I was told to do. I wasn't in possession of anything I ought not be and either wasn't doing anything wrong or didn't do anything that would incite unnecessary aggression. It would seem I've never been shot dead by an officer with a chip on their shoulder as a result of these actions.

Come on, man. You know as well as I do that anecdote is not the singular of data. Your experience does nothing to disprove a systemic problem within the US police and their approach to law enforcement.

I don't doubt that most of the police are approachable, but we're in a thread where the last major point of discussion involves someone being shot while not being in possession of anything he ought not to be, wasn't doing anything wrong and really didn't do anything that deserved being shot.

I don't doubt that the vast majority of police interactions in the US go just fine. But as an external observer, it does seem like the police in the US shoot a fairly high number of people for reasons that are at best dubious. If I ever have the misfortune to go to the US, I will be doing my best not to interact with the police at all.

I can accept that it can be tough in the heat of the moment, and even with perfect training and judgement there are occasionally going to be innocent people shot and killed. I do not believe that zero innocent shootings is achievable or reasonable. My question to you would be what proportion of shootings where the target did not present a credible threat (such as say, the Daniel Shaver incident) would you accept from a modern police force? The intention is not to aim that question specifically at the US, but you may have to because the US presents such a unique policing situation compared to many other countries.

I believe around 1000 people are shot and killed by police in the US each year. Many of those are justified, I'm sure. However, of those thousand what would be the maximum number of "non-threats" (like Shaver or Andrew Finch) that you would deem to be reasonable?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/national/police-shootings-2017/
 
Come on, man. You know as well as I do that anecdote is not the singular of data. Your experience does nothing to disprove a systemic problem within the US police and their approach to law enforcement.
And I've already acknowledged there's a problem that needs to be addressed.

I've also already seen that link.

Here's one that gives some other imprtant-to-consider figures that, while not terribly recent (still in the current decade), ought to provide some much needed context:

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/394249/dojs-policing-statistics-dont-lie-ian-tuttle

It states that "in 2011, the most recent year for which data is available [as of 2014], 62.9 million U.S. residents age 16 or older, or about one quarter of American adults, had at least one encounter, face-to-face or remote, with police. Half (49 percent) were police-initiated; traffic stops accounted for four out of every ten encounters (42 percent), as did citizen requests for assistance (38.5 percent)."

Feel free to read what follows immediately in the article--I posted the link for exactly that reason--but more numbers that may shed even more light are touched upon:

"Of the 40 million Americans (16.9 percent) who had a face-to-face encounter with law enforcement in 2008, only 1.4 percent reported having force threatened or used against them."

As I said, the figures aren't to date, but they were were taken from the Bureau of Justice Statistics' Police-Public Contact Survey which is collected triennially.

In the interest of full disclosure, links to source documents within the article show that the number of contact incidents has dropped sharply from years prior, but I suspect we all know decreasing trends can't continue endlessly, particularly when population has increased from 304 to 325 million since 2008.

I'll reiterate, there is definitely a problem with use of force extremes, but "976 citizens killed by police" doesn't tell the whole story.

I opted to include anecdotal information earlier because I'm inclined to believe the need for change in these interactions goes both ways--a "you get what you give" sort of thing.

Pardon me if that isn't what I understand as "approachable" when challenged by a fellow citizen.
There was one sentence in the paragraph that you didn't quote where I remarked on the approachability of the police, and it wasn't "all you read here speaks to police being approachable." Could the post have been formatted better? Sure, but the remark commented on wasn't represented in the paragraph quoted.
 
"Of the 40 million Americans (16.9 percent) who had a face-to-face encounter with law enforcement in 2008, only 1.4 percent reported having force threatened or used against them."

And does that seem high or low to you? I didn't ask for numbers, we can all go and find them. I'm more interested in your opinion of those numbers.

You should note also that having a large number of non-violent police interactions doesn't necessarily justify a small number of very violent ones. There's always going to be a distribution, but it's more than just about the average. The variance also matters, and I think there's a difference between 40 million police interactions with 1000 faces punched and 40 million police interactions with 1000 people shot.

Your opinion may be different, which is why I asked for some information on what you'd actually consider to be acceptable from a police force.

I'll reiterate, there is definitely a problem with use of force extremes, but "976 citizens killed by police" doesn't tell the whole story.

I wasn't actually using it to tell a story at all, I was using it to frame a question that you've completely avoided answering. You'll note if you read again that I said that many of the shootings were justified. I'm not actually interested in the story behind 1000 shootings, at least not at the moment. I'm interested in what hypothetical proportion of those you would be OK with knowing were unreasonable.

Do you want to talk about what an acceptable level of police related casualties might look like? Or is that something that you're just going to avoid? I think it's an interesting line of discussion around what should be acceptable, but perhaps you find it to be a little too close to home.
 
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I can accept that it can be tough in the heat of the moment, and even with perfect training and judgement there are occasionally going to be innocent people shot and killed. I do not believe that zero innocent shootings is achievable or reasonable. My question to you would be what proportion of shootings where the target did not present a credible threat (such as say, the Daniel Shaver incident) would you accept from a modern police force? The intention is not to aim that question specifically at the US, but you may have to because the US presents such a unique policing situation compared to many other countries.
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Thinking about the Daniel Shaver shooting more....I just can not wrap my head around how this outcome was even a possibility, if the officers involved had proper training.

Hypothetical situation. What if the officers weren't police, but were Army or Marines, and Daniel was a person of interest for intelligence gathering perposes (not everyone you want to interrogate always comes willingly)? Are these the same type of procedures that would be used?

Mission Report: I feared for my life, so I killed the target instead of securing it and completing the mission. Sorry Capt. But hey, I'm still here :)

What if Daniel didn't speak English? Would these same procedures be followed?

"Lay on the floor! Don't move! We will shoot you! Cross your legs! Hands in the air! Don't uncross your legs! Don't put your hands down! Now crawl to me! CRAWL!!"

"Je ne comprend pas!!!!"

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Mission Report: I couldn't understand what the target was saying, and things I don't understand make me fear for my life. So I shot the target 5 times.....I guess this means we won't be getting out hands on that critical information. Sorry Capt. My bad."

The procedures for controlling that situation in a more reasonable, logical way exist. These cops either didn't have that training, or chose to be cowboys. I don't know, maybe the fact that he had "You're :censored:ed" engraved on his rifle indicates that maybe training wouldn't have mattered.

But that leads me to another question. Did no one else in his unit know about the engraving on his rifle? I find it hard to believe that he kept that a secret. So if other people did know about it, and he was allowed to use it in the line of duty, to me that indicates there is a bigger problem with the unit as a whole. Either someone in a leadership position is not inspecting the equipment of their subordinates, or they are and they're letting things like that pass. Seeing pictures of the cop who murdered Daniel, and knowing about the rifle, it reminds me of the Airborne Regiment in the Canadian military - the one that went a little Rambo in Somalia in the early 90s. Skull bandanas and obscene things written on their equipment. Some real badasses who did some pretty disturbing things.

The entire unit was dismantled, and public opinion of the military in Canada was so low that Armed Forces members were not allowed to wear their uniforms off base, unless for special reasons (unlike today were its completely common and normal to see men and women in uniform in public, in towns and cities near bases).

Again....why the different standards?

It's hard for me to decide what's worse. A father of 2 being dead, or the fact that the shooter was acquitted. Tin foil hat time, yes he won't be a cop anymore, but I gaurentee there's a number of "security" companies who would employ his services, doing god knows what in some dark corner of the earth.

But he was scared....so it's all good.

What's that Yoda line, about fear leading to the dark side?
 
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I'm interested in what hypothetical proportion of those you would be OK with knowing were unreasonable.
I'm not "OK" with anyone's life being ended unnecessarily/unreasonably, regardless of whose hand at which it is ended--an acknowledgment of the need to address the path these interactions take should reflect that. To clarify...none.

Here's one (well, two, but they're related) for you: What, to your mind, is justifiable/reasonable cause to end a life in these circumstances, and how many of those 976 deaths do you acknowledge may have been justifiable/reasonable? So nobody seeing this (including myself it were posed by somebody else) and takes it to be rhetorical, it is not and I'm genuinely interested in a response.
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I'm not "OK" with anyone's life being ended unnecessarily/unreasonably, regardless of whose hand at which it is ended--an acknowledgment of the need to address the path these interactions take should reflect that. To clarify...none.

Well, that's just unhelpful and unreasonable. That's like saying that the road toll should be zero. That's all fine and well to have as a target, but given the situation it's profoundly unrealistic. You have armed citizenry and armed police. The police are human, and are on occasion going to make errors in judgement, either through faulty reasoning in a stressful situation or simply because the information they have in inadequate or erroneous.

I'd say that if you ask a rational an intelligent policeman (or military personnel) they will identify some low but non-zero number. They'd like it to be zero, but they're willing to accept that humans are human and that there are potential costs involved in policing.

One does not go to war expecting zero casualties. Likewise, one does not send out SWAT teams expecting zero casualties. They are going prepared to shoot people for the greater good of the community. Sometimes that is going to go wrong, and people are going to die.

Here's one (well, two, but they're related) for you: What, to your mind, is justifiable/reasonable cause to end a life in these circumstances, and how many of those 976 deaths do you acknowledge may have been justifiable/reasonable? So nobody seeing this (including myself it were posed by somebody else) and takes it to be rhetorical, it is not and I'm genuinely interested in a response.[/B]
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For the first, let's take the specific scenario of Andrew Finch, the SWATted guy. In what situation do I think it would have been reasonable to shoot him? Well, let's set up the situation. We have the house surrounded by a SWAT team. I'm going to assume that they're in reasonably solid cover, and the video I saw didn't show any of them particularly close to the house. They haven't identified themselves, an occupant of the house has come outside of his own volition to see what the ruckus is. They've blinded him with lights, and barked orders at him while holding their weapons on him. At this point, I think he's probably doing well not to wet himself.

The only situation I can think of that would demand immediate return fire is if he fired on the police first. Even then, depending on the situation (range, weapon, cover, etc) it may not be necessary. If he simply pulls a weapon in the situation above and holds it, certainly not. I would wait for further development. He may lay it down. Making any motion, regardless of what it looks like it not cause for firing. I maintain that there is no pants holsterable weapon that could pose significant threat to the SWAT team if they set up correctly, as they should be trained to do. You cannot expect him to be pinning headshots through the glare of spotlights on a moment's notice straight off the draw. If he returns to the house, then it's time to regroup and try and open a dialogue.

For the second, I can't give you an answer for those 976 deaths. I'd have to look at all of them, and in more depth than the two sentences provided for each by the WaPo. I don't have the time, the interest, and I don't think that there's value in me doing it. But it's not more than 975 of them, because it includes Andrew Finch. That was not a justifiable/reasonable shooting.

If you have a question that I can reasonably answer without spending hundreds of hours looking into the details of 975 shooting cases, then I'm happy to do my best.

I guess it comes down to who you apply "innocent until proven guilty" to. You seem to be leaning towards applying it to the police, that unless it can be proven otherwise then their uses of force (even lethal force) are just. I tend to apply it to the victims, that unless it can be proven that force/lethal force was absolutely necessary then it's application was unjust. In many cases, it can be shown that the use of force was, if not absolutely necessary, certainly appropriate.

I find it interesting that despite these positions, I'm willing to accept a certain level of innocent casualties and you are not. I'll throw the book at any officer that causes them, but I won't call the system broken simply because occasionally the wrong people get shot. I'll call it broken when too many of the wrong people get shot, and for reasons that indicate that there are systemic flaws leading to major misjudgments and poor decision making.

If popping a guy on his porch because he faltered in keeping his hands up under stress is considered appropriate protocol, I call that a flawed system regardless of how many casualties it causes. In my line of work, we aim to identify and eliminate these kinds of potentially lethal situations before someone is affected by them. It's not always possible, but certainly afterwards it's considered mandatory to take action to ensure that the mistake is not repeated.
 
You asked how many I'm "OK" with, and when coupled with that unhelpful and unreasonable "too close to home" remark, seems to hint at a perceived complete disregard for life on my part.

I'm appalled when I see someone killed while complying with commands given by an officer of the law, or fleeing on foot for that matter, as if giving chase either on foot or in vehicle isn't an option. I think those officers deserve the harshest punishment that a court of law is capable of passing down, and I think it atrocious when that court is incapable of passing down any punishment at all.

As for the question you didn't ask but are still holding over my head as though you did, I just plain don't know what figure is actually attainable. That all depends on what compromises those responsible for penning tactics are willing to make regarding safety of all involved, what reinforcement of these tactics takes place, what sort of investigation regarding the fitness of the force takes place (because there are obviously those unfit to serve), and myriad other actions. If it were simple to fix, it wouldn't be broken.

There's something else that I really need to address, and that's the unnecessary and baseless remarks regarding my thought process ("too close to home") and biases. Nowhere have I stood up for individuals that harm others in any manner, and have even assisted with keeping the harmed away from further and/or increased harm--but I won't go into that about dangerous pranks (*cough* *cough*).
 
For the first, let's take the specific scenario of Andrew Finch, the SWATted guy. In what situation do I think it would have been reasonable to shoot him? Well, let's set up the situation. We have the house surrounded by a SWAT team. I'm going to assume that they're in reasonably solid cover, and the video I saw didn't show any of them particularly close to the house. They haven't identified themselves, an occupant of the house has come outside of his own volition to see what the ruckus is. They've blinded him with lights, and barked orders at him while holding their weapons on him. At this point, I think he's probably doing well not to wet himself.

The only situation I can think of that would demand immediate return fire is if he fired on the police first. Even then, depending on the situation (range, weapon, cover, etc) it may not be necessary. If he simply pulls a weapon in the situation above and holds it, certainly not. I would wait for further development. He may lay it down. Making any motion, regardless of what it looks like it not cause for firing. I maintain that there is no pants holsterable weapon that could pose significant threat to the SWAT team if they set up correctly, as they should be trained to do. You cannot expect him to be pinning headshots through the glare of spotlights on a moment's notice straight off the draw. If he returns to the house, then it's time to regroup and try and open a dialogue.

For the second, I can't give you an answer for those 976 deaths. I'd have to look at all of them, and in more depth than the two sentences provided for each by the WaPo. I don't have the time, the interest, and I don't think that there's value in me doing it. But it's not more than 975 of them, because it includes Andrew Finch. That was not a justifiable/reasonable shooting.

If you have a question that I can reasonably answer without spending hundreds of hours looking into the details of 975 shooting cases, then I'm happy to do my best.

I guess it comes down to who you apply "innocent until proven guilty" to. You seem to be leaning towards applying it to the police, that unless it can be proven otherwise then their uses of force (even lethal force) are just. I tend to apply it to the victims, that unless it can be proven that force/lethal force was absolutely necessary then it's application was unjust. In many cases, it can be shown that the use of force was, if not absolutely necessary, certainly appropriate.

I find it interesting that despite these positions, I'm willing to accept a certain level of innocent casualties and you are not. I'll throw the book at any officer that causes them, but I won't call the system broken simply because occasionally the wrong people get shot. I'll call it broken when too many of the wrong people get shot, and for reasons that indicate that there are systemic flaws leading to major misjudgments and poor decision making.

If popping a guy on his porch because he faltered in keeping his hands up under stress is considered appropriate protocol, I call that a flawed system regardless of how many casualties it causes. In my line of work, we aim to identify and eliminate these kinds of potentially lethal situations before someone is affected by them. It's not always possible, but certainly afterwards it's considered mandatory to take action to ensure that the mistake is not repeated.
"If he returns to the house then it's time to regroup and open a dialogue". You're leaving out some important information here. In their minds he's not just a guy answering the door, he's a murderer holding his family hostage and he's spread gasoline around the house. Letting him go back inside could result in the deaths of several people. I don't know what the SWAT handbook says on incidents like this but I doubt, "let the murderer who's spread gasoline all around the house go back inside and just bring out the bullhorn" is part of the protocol. In hindsight it's easy to see the guy shouldn't have been shot but I don't envy these guys and the split second decisions they have to make. Mistakes will be made, several dozen a year I would expect, given the tens of millions of interactions with police every year.
 
Has anyome here watched the fallen project documentary on Netflix.

I'm not choosing a side in this argument however i wanted to bring another side to this discussion.
 
Could a misunderstanding over the use of large figures to put smaller figures into perspective be taking place? By stating that these incidents are a drop in the proverbial bucket I don't mean to imply that they're not a big deal. I'm frustrated that these large figures aren't represented in media reports when these incidents occur and I fear this glaring omission will give rise to a "The police are at the door; I need to defend myself!" mentality--and that will only lead to a significant increase in unnecessary deaths, on both sides of the door.

As unfortunate as they are, these incidents are not typical.
 
The police are at the door; I need to defend myself!
You should have that mentality to some degree though, they're likely not there on a social visit. The job of the police is to investigate crime and apprehend suspects, it's safe to say they have already considered you a criminal and are proceeding with their safety in mind, not yours.

Has everyone who wants to, seen the video? I'll put it in spoilers
 
You asked how many I'm "OK" with, and when coupled with that unhelpful and unreasonable "too close to home" remark, seems to hint at a perceived complete disregard for life on my part.

You think so, when I've stated outright that I'm willing to accept a non-zero innocent death rate myself?

As far as the too close to home part, you seem at times to be quite defensive. As seen in the post that I replied to with the too close to home remark, where you complained that the 976 deaths link doesn't tell the whole story, despite me not using it to tell a story at all.

As for the question you didn't ask but are still holding over my head as though you did, I just plain don't know what figure is actually attainable.

That's not the question that I asked, and it's not the one I'm holding over your head. Let's go back to the original post and look, shall we?

I can accept that it can be tough in the heat of the moment, and even with perfect training and judgement there are occasionally going to be innocent people shot and killed. I do not believe that zero innocent shootings is achievable or reasonable. My question to you would be what proportion of shootings where the target did not present a credible threat (such as say, the Daniel Shaver incident) would you accept from a modern police force? The intention is not to aim that question specifically at the US, but you may have to because the US presents such a unique policing situation compared to many other countries.

I believe around 1000 people are shot and killed by police in the US each year. Many of those are justified, I'm sure. However, of those thousand what would be the maximum number of "non-threats" (like Shaver or Andrew Finch) that you would deem to be reasonable?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/national/police-shootings-2017/

The bolded are essentially two rewordings of the same question, to try and make sure that I'm getting my point across clearly. I'm not sure whether I'm not, or whether you're just reacting to questions that you think I'm asking but aren't there.

Admittedly, the "how many are you OK with" was poorly worded, but it was referencing the post above and so I assumed that you would take the multiple paragraphs I wrote on the subject into consideration instead of a single sentence intended to remind you that you missed a (to my mind fairly important) question.

There's something else that I really need to address, and that's the unnecessary and baseless remarks regarding my thought process ("too close to home") and biases. Nowhere have I stood up for individuals that harm others in any manner, and have even assisted with keeping the harmed away from further and/or increased harm--but I won't go into that about dangerous pranks (*cough* *cough*).

I haven't implied or said as such. However, you're quite defensive regarding the police and their tactics, which arguably lead to these situations.

You came out with anecdotal evidence that the police are approachable providing that you follow their instructions, which is a distraction and doesn't address any of the points of the discussion that was ongoing at the time.
You provided figures that only 1.4% of people interacting with police have force threatened or used against them (and never answered whether you thought that was low or high), without consideration that it's the range of force used that is the problem.
As said above, you expressed dislike for the 976 shootings link based on something that I wasn't saying.
I can't tell whether you're avoiding answering questions about your opinions intentionally or just skipping over them.
Edit: See one of your later posts, "As unfortunate as they are, these incidents are not typical."

I only know about you what you write here on the forum. If the image of you that I'm building is incorrect I apologise, but it's hard when you won't clarify questions about your own opinions. I'm forced to assume given that you won't spell it out for me. If you'd like to correct that, then please do.

"If he returns to the house then it's time to regroup and open a dialogue". You're leaving out some important information here. In their minds he's not just a guy answering the door, he's a murderer holding his family hostage and he's spread gasoline around the house. Letting him go back inside could result in the deaths of several people.

Fair point. I actually considered it, but I didn't elucidate explicitly. Allow me to do so now.

The only source of information that they have that there's a murderer holding his family hostage with gasoline around the house is an anonymous phone call. SWAT teams should be well aware at this point that SWATting exists.

I don't think it's reasonable to take a shot at an unarmed man (assuming he turned around and walked inside) based on a single anonymous phone call. For all the SWAT team knows, he could have killed the family already and so shooting him accomplishes nothing. They have about as much information to suggest that as to suggest that he's a murderer holding hostages.

I mean, they don't even know if the guy on the porch is the "murderer". All they know is a male walked out of the house to see what the noise is. They assumed that the only male free to do so would be the "murderer", based on an anonymous phone call. That's a big assumption to start shooting at someone with.

I don't know what the SWAT handbook says on incidents like this but I doubt, "let the murderer who's spread gasoline all around the house go back inside and just bring out the bullhorn" is part of the protocol.

It should be the start, but I'm not suggesting that they just sit there and wait. They can approach and attempt to gather more information, or breach if they deem it reasonable and safe to do so. They are potentially time limited if the report of the situation is accurate, but I don't think that's an excuse to go guns blazing based on a single anonymous report.

In hindsight it's easy to see the guy shouldn't have been shot but I don't envy these guys and the split second decisions they have to make.

Neither do I, but that's why there's training and protocols. Nobody can be expected to make good decisions in such high stress and limited time situations. For the vast majority, it should simply be following procedure that you have practised and discussed for significant periods of time in the peace of your own station.

If shooting Andrew Finch in that situation is part of the protocol, the protocol is wrong. Which is sort of what I've been getting at, it's not so much about the decision that was made. It's about the procedures and thinking that led to putting that officer in that situation and training him to respond in that way.

I give the officer a little credit in that he too should have thought about what he was doing and identified that the procedure was extreme, but the larger problem to me is the system that creates situations in which the "correct" choice is to shoot people.

Mistakes will be made, several dozen a year I would expect, given the tens of millions of interactions with police every year.

You're coming around to the question I asked @TexRex. I expect the same, mistakes will be made. See above if you'd be interested in taking a crack at the question of how many mistakes might be considered acceptable in a well functioning system given a thousand shootings a year.

I know it's an uncomfortable question. It's very un-PC to say anything except "any deaths above zero are unacceptable", but that's just not how the real world works. I think here we can get beyond PC culture to having a reasonable discussion of reality.
 
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