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How Should Police Stop A Knife-Swinging Laquan On PCP?
Misadventures in Diversity ^ | 11/25/15 | Donald Joy

Posted on 11/25/2015 11:57:19 AM PST by IChing

In the latest high-profile racial railroading of a white policeman for obvious political reasons, it has taken authorities over a full year to decide to charge Chicago cop Jason Van Dyke in the fatal shooting of black 17-year-old Laquan McDonald.

The obviousness of the racial/political theater here is largely due to the fact that the timing of the ridiculous charge — first degree murder — being suddenly announced after all these months, so transparently coincides with the sudden FOIA public release of a police dashcam video of the shooting which, to the untrained eye, looks pretty bad.

The video in question has been in the possession of the authorites this entire time. If it was a bad shoot, especially if so bad as to amount to first degree murder, they should have charged him long ago, apart from the racially ginned-up public and media hysteria wrought by release of the video, no?

As for allegations about the incident itself, there are some gray areas, and some clear-cut lines.

Officers were attempting to apprehend McDonald, who was later determined to have had PCP in his system, after he had been rampaging around the area and using a knife to not only break into cars and other property, but also slashed the tire of a police car in an initial attempt to arrest him just moments before he encountered Van Dyke and other officers.

The video shows that McDonald was not “walking away from” the officers, as many are insisting; he was walking briskly abreast of them and turning toward them(4:45), his left hand inside his pocket and swinging the knife in his right hand.

Most police officers are trained on the “21-foot rule”(also known as the Tueller Drill), the distance at which an officer’s “reactionary gap” (the time it takes the officer to recognize the threat, reach, draw, aim, and fire on the subject) puts his own life in jeopardy from a subject with an edged weapon.

Here’s a very good demonstration of the 21-foot rule:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_KJ1R2PCMM

It has been proven over and over again (unfortunately not only in training drills but in many cases where officers have been murdered/gravely wounded) that an agile subject with an edged weapon can suddenly, as rapidly as 1.5 seconds, close a distance of up to 21 feet to fatally stab/slash a victim, even kill or seriously wound a trained police officer armed with a gun.

That’s LESS time than it takes an officer to recognize the threat, reach, draw, aim, and fire on the subject — the “reactionary gap.” 1.23 seconds is the fastest closing time of the 21-foot distance measured.

I played the video over and over at various speeds, and the taser wires are visible well before McDonald shows any kind of reaction(indicating that the taser may not have functioned immediately or properly), and he actually turns toward the officers(4:45) as he walks briskly abreast of them with the wires attached, swinging the knife in one hand, with his other hand in his pocket.

Then, it looks like the gunfire is what brings him down, because you can see dust/debris kicked up as the rounds hit the concrete around/under McDonald’s body when he falls.

If Van Dyke believed the taser did not function, it can be argued that he legitimately perceived McDonald (who had just slashed a police car’s tire with the knife) to be an imminent deadly threat within the 21-foot reactionary gap.

That perception wouldn’t mean that he necessarily HAD to shoot McDonald, but it would definitely mean he’s not guilty of murder.

The 21-foot rule has come under scrutiny and criticism in recent years/months, and I predict it will (as “stand your ground,” as misapplied as it was, in the Zimmerman case) be the centerpiece of this case.

Not guilty.

Oh, and by the way, as for the number of shots fired, the official answer is that once deadly force is deemed justified, the number of shots is really moot — although we all know that the public, media, and jurors can imagine that there can be some kind of “excessive” force beyond deadly force.


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Miscellaneous; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: banglist; chicago; crime; jasonvandyke; laquanmcdonald
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To: Moonman62

Is your husband a cop?


161 posted on 11/25/2015 7:16:48 PM PST by Fundamentally Fair (Pictionary at the Rorschach's tonight!)
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To: Fundamentally Fair

Another person with nothing but a personal attack.

And there’s nothing like getting flak when I’m over the target.


162 posted on 11/25/2015 7:35:19 PM PST by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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To: Springfield Reformer; IChing

Thanks for posting the link.

Is a subject who is commanded to stop but doesn’t stop under control?

Is a subject with a hand in the pocket who is commanded to show his hand under control?

Is a person wielding a knife within striking distance and is commanded to drop the knife, but doesn’t, under control?

The defense will also bring up the subject being on PCP.


163 posted on 11/25/2015 7:41:12 PM PST by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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To: Moonman62

The guy is going to jail for life. The city settled for 5 million. The guy had 18 complaints, including a previous one that cost the city 350k. He should have been fired a long time ago.

Good cops are going to get killed because of loons like that guy.


164 posted on 11/25/2015 7:46:01 PM PST by DHerion
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To: Secret Agent Man

Possum?...so you shoot him on the ground after pumping a couple rounds in the guy? Seriously, you can’t defend trigger happy idiots like that. He had 18 previous complaints, one that cost the city 350k to settle. He should have been kicked off the force a long time ago.


165 posted on 11/25/2015 7:48:22 PM PST by DHerion
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To: DHerion
Good cops are going to get killed because of loons like that guy.
"Good cops" protect loons like this guy.
166 posted on 11/25/2015 7:50:04 PM PST by Fundamentally Fair (Pictionary at the Rorschach's tonight!)
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To: DHerion

Why bother having a trial?


167 posted on 11/25/2015 8:12:20 PM PST by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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To: kjam22

I believe the shooting was entirely according to police doctrine. Remember those cop shows where the leading character cops adroitly disarm a dangerous but confused suspect ? Uh uh. Not doctrine.

A lot of this is because of biological dangers, such as biting, or who knows what kind of contamination. Today’s cops are taught to avoid all physical contact. It comes down to obey or be killed, and this is what they are taught.

In this case, if there was one cop who opened fire ahead of the others, it is because, IMO, he was the one who OBEYED doctrine, in contrast to the others who hesitated based on humanitarian sympathies, that he wasn’t REALLY a threat and he wasn’t charging at me.

Doctrine says that he WAS a threat and he WAS NOT complying, so deadly force was the immediate indication.

Maybe I’m all wrong on this, but I don’t see how.


168 posted on 11/25/2015 9:25:08 PM PST by dr_lew
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To: kjam22
You realize that premeditation takes all of about 5 seconds. Right? Once you decide to kill someone and do it... that is premeditation.

You do realize that if it can take as little as 5 seconds to "achieve" doesn't mean that it has ever been legally proven or even attempted.
The hysteria is so bad that one of the TV bimbo lawyers blurted out that "premeditatin" could be achieved in only a couple of seconds.
Good luck proving that.

169 posted on 11/25/2015 10:12:54 PM PST by publius911 (IMPEACH HIM NOW! evil ignorant stupid or crazy-doesn't matter!)
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To: Salvavida

Not too sharp. Try putting 2 and 2 together for the answer. Hint: Look in the most obvious place. Who is he?

You’ve never had training in the 21-foot rule, that’s plain.

Get acquainted with the fundamental difference in character between law enforcement officers, who have a “duty to act” — that is, to actively seek out, confront, apprehend, and overcome lawbreakers and threats, and that of security guards, which is moreover the duty to retreat/defend.

To the point, LEOs must sometimes aggressively act to confront/bring about a situation wherein deadly force winds up being necessary, even though it is the last resort to resolve the situation, whereas those doing guard/security duties are primarily required to hold to post limits, not seek out such situations beyond limited orders, and not pursue, etc., except in extraordinary circumstances.


170 posted on 11/25/2015 10:18:20 PM PST by IChing
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To: Salvavida

Anyhow, I tend to concur with you as to the outcome of the case, but not necessarily on its merits, more along the lines of the nature of the likely jury pool.

As for DoD mission security forces, military police (the USAF academy I went through trains the Marine MPs), special deputy U.S. marshal, presidential and cabinet-level protective details, and an array of civilian-sector environments/roles where armed use of force training and duties are concerned, I’ve worn all those hats over the last 34 years.

But don’t feel bad about the 21-foot rule thing. I myself hadn’t really been thoroughly acquainted with/trained on it until about 8-9 years ago.


171 posted on 11/25/2015 10:30:34 PM PST by IChing
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To: smokingfrog

“why it took a whole year for this to come out”

Chicago Politics- Rahm was in tight re-election cycle. If released earlier would have possibly elected his opponent.


172 posted on 11/25/2015 10:37:04 PM PST by Nailbiter
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To: dragnet2

“How long were they in vehicle pursuit? 5 or 10 minutes?”

Cops were in vehicles- Laquan was on foot abusing vehicles


173 posted on 11/25/2015 10:38:57 PM PST by Nailbiter
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To: Moonman62

If you refer to the chart in the Chicago PD model, you will see that a resistor who is evading rather than confronting falls into a different force category than an aggressor who is, well, aggressing and thus likely to cause harm. Control measures for the evading resister do NOT include firearms or impact munitions. It seems like common sense to me, but the chart actually spells this out, so the officer is bound to this as the policy under which he was obligated to act.

Now I agree the defense is going to try to put the subject into the aggressor category, and him having a knife certainly helps them do that. The problem is, at the time the first rounds were fired, he’s evading, not lunging at the officer. He looks like he’s literally just trying to casually walk past them. It’s probably the PCP.

So if I’m sitting on the jury, of course I’ll be told about the 21 foot rule, but I’m having a hard time looking at that video and buying that he was, at the moment of the first shot, aggressing. It just didn’t look like that to me. More like drug induced random cockiness combined with an overall pattern of avoidance. I’m just telling you how it looked to me. That’s a lot for the defense to overcome, because I’m sure I’m not alone in perceiving his movements that way. The jury’s perception matters.

Furthermore, let’s say the jury gives Van Dyke the benefit of the doubt on the first few shots. Once McDonald is on the ground, there’s much better argument for him being under control. I watched that segment of the video frame by frame. Once he collapses, there is a period of some head and hand movement, then that stops, and stays stopped for a while, and then there are some new shots bouncing off the pavement making little dust clouds. For all the world it looks like Van Dyke is shooting a man already dead, or at minimum totally passive. So I think the defense has a rough time getting past that.

Now here’s another way it can get really interesting. Let’s back up to the first shots. Once the officer has breached his duty of care and overstepped a lethal force boundary, the possibility exists that the subject is now *entitled* to defend his own life, and the right of persons being wrongfully attacked to defend their own lives against even the police has been established in a long line of case law. So the prosecution could argue that even if he was pulling a gun at that point, the officer had effectively waived his immunity through his initial use of excessive force under both the PD policy and the reasonable officer doctrine.

Bottom line, all of this could have been mitigated upstream. It really didn’t have to go this way. Obey or be killed is NOT the rule. There is no case law to support such barbarism. Human life matters too much. The thresholds for lethal force have been carefully marked out to protect people to the extent possible, without putting innocent others at risk. Even being on PCP is not an excuse to end the life of a vandal, except to prevent an even greater harm.

Peace,

SR


174 posted on 11/26/2015 12:28:36 AM PST by Springfield Reformer (Winston Churchill: No Peace Till Victory!)
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To: publius911

Its proved often. It is the law is in oklahoma whether we agree with it or not


175 posted on 11/26/2015 5:59:59 AM PST by kjam22
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To: Springfield Reformer

So if I’m sitting on the jury, of course I’ll be told about the 21 foot rule, but I’m having a hard time looking at that video and buying that he was, at the moment of the first shot, aggressing. It just didn’t look like that to me. More like drug induced random cockiness combined with an overall pattern of avoidance. I’m just telling you how it looked to me. That’s a lot for the defense to overcome, because I’m sure I’m not alone in perceiving his movements that way. The jury’s perception matters.

...

It might be a judge rather than a jury. Some of these accused police are choosing a bench trial rather than a jury and being exonerated. Whoever it is, they’ll have to consider a lot more than what you are bringing up. I disagree about the subject evading, but that’s going to be decided at trial, not here on FR. One of the things the judge or jury will have to do is place themselves in the position of the officer at the time, considering the totality of circumstances.

Placing yourself in your safe desk chair, watching a video on Youtube isn’t the standard established by the Supreme court.


176 posted on 11/26/2015 6:46:04 AM PST by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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To: IChing
The 21 ft rule isn't a rule, it is a guideline. You do not get to engage someone arbitrarily, skipping the continuum of force (conversation, non-lethals, etc) and blasting them when they are not presenting an immediate threat to your person or someone else.

All of your experience failed you, and that is the reason why the cop does the perp walk.

177 posted on 11/26/2015 7:45:48 AM PST by Salvavida (The restoration of the U.S.A. starts with filling the pews at every Bible-believing church.)
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To: Moonman62

The video doesn’t actually show the officer aiming his weapon and firing it at the decedent. Rather, the decedent seems to come abreast of the officer, who is not in the frame, a flurry of shots is fired in a second or less, and the decedent drops. It does not appear that more shots were fired after he fell. That says the cop could have reasonably feared for his life and been justified in firing, the Illinois standard for use of lethal force being reasonable fear of death or Great bodily harm.


178 posted on 11/26/2015 8:20:54 AM PST by libstripper
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To: VerySadAmerican

Look at the video. It doesn’t appear that and shots were fired after the decedent was dropped. Remember, “Hands up, don’t shoot.”


179 posted on 11/26/2015 8:24:14 AM PST by libstripper
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To: libstripper

If the autopsy report showing the wounds has them numbered in the order of shots, then the first four bullets hit him in the front of his upper body, which would mean he had turned toward the accused. It will all come out at trial.

However, the press has already convicted the officer and the majority of his life is ruined regardless of the outcome.


180 posted on 11/26/2015 9:00:41 AM PST by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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