Posted on 08/23/2005 10:47:25 AM PDT by JamesP81
A Cleveland man died last Sunday after a scuffle with security guards at the Walmart Super Center located at 6626 FM1960 in Atascocita.
According to witnesses, Stacy Driver ran out of the store and was pursued by Walmart loss prevention employees. A short time later, Driver was dead, and the Walmart employees were trying to explain the last moments of his life to police.
Charles Portz said he was getting out of his car when he saw a heavy blonde haired man being chased by five people who appeared to be security or store employees. He said he saw them wrestling the man to the ground. "The blacktop was extremely hot," said Portz "He had no shirt on and they wouldn't let him up off the blacktop."
snip
According to Portz, Driver began to plead with them men. "He's begging, 'Please call an ambulance, let me up, do something, I'm gonna die," said Portz. He said the loss prevention employees called the police more than once, but another bystander called for an ambulance after realizing Driver was in trouble. Portz said he eventually began to plead with the Walmart employees. "I told them, this guy doesn't look like he's breathing," Portz said, "They said, 'He's all right."
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The store employees could not have known that the witness who was pleading with them to let Driver get up from the hot pavement was a high profile Houston attorney, from the Portz and Portz law firm.
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No, his stealing is what led to his death.
eastforker is just trying to justify this guy's death in any way that he can....apparently he is an ends-justifies-the-means kinda guy.
Ties go to the security guards...
1. He steals
2. He is subdued and handcuffed and restrained.
3. He dies.
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Looks to me like there was a rather significant step between 1 and 3.
Yeah, I get that feeling too. I just wonder why?
Take care,
Ruck
Is this what you are referring to? Were these armed security gurards or unarmed LP staff?
My point is, you'd have to be a complete idiot to follow this policy. "If we can stop them, then we do so" LOL! Is this after their head is blown off? How do they know who is armed and who isn't? Too funny.
Why are you trying to justify that it is okay to steal and when caught you can run and fight?
It is not OK to steal. But last I checked, the penalty for shoplifting (a misdemeanor) was not death. Hell, in most cases the only penalty is a civil fine.
I can't imagine walmart is this stupid. If you were an unarmed LP employee, getting paid $10 bucks an hour, would you go after people in the parking lot and get physical with them for stealing walmart trinkets?
I'd say this was a suicidal policy for Walmart LP folks.
Did you read the Texas law I cited about what owners of property. or their agent, are permitted to do to secure stolen property. If he had stopped when he was detected instead of running this incident would have never happened. If he had not run he would have been taken into custody, went in front of a judge and because of his past record probably gone to prison.
Next, the Walmart LP guys will sue Walmart for injuries they sustained while attempting to to apprehend the suspect, and for walmarts policy, that puts them in grave danger.
Besides, it looks like they acted negligently, b/c properly restraining someone does not result in death by asphixyation.
I really doubt it, not down here.
Yep murder. Plain and simple, murder. What's worse, this guy obviously new he was in bad shape at some point and began begging for his life. These scumbags that killed him deserve a short stay at Huntsville. They'll never get it of course, but I'll settle for 25 years of hard time.
There is no such thing as excessive force, just force and deadly force. They did not use deadly force, the guy happened to die while being subdude with force, no malice and no intent to kill.
Happens all time, everywhere.
Yeah, yeah, yeah...
For some reason, I've had this flash vision of the classic "guy-left-out-in-the-desert-to-die".
You know, the one where he's laid out flat on his back, arms and legs stretched out and tied down to stakes, with vultures circling overhead and the desert sun beating down on him...
In comparison, THAT horrific scenario is really quite serene...
at least the dude staked down in the desert didn't have a half-dozen obese WalMart associates piled on top of him, squashing him into the hot desert sand.
Doesn't matter my friend. If they followed *Walmarts* suicide policy, like they were suppose to, and they are injured in the process of attempting to subdue a suspect, Walmart is liable. Period, end of story.
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