Posted on 07/06/2011 10:57:49 AM PDT by The Magical Mischief Tour
On May 10, 43-year old Allen Kephart died after being tased multiple times by three San Bernardino, California sheriff's deputies during a routine traffic stop.
Kephart, a quiet and well-liked member of the tight-knit mountain community around Lake Arrowhead, allegedly ran a stop sign and became combative during the stop.
But local residents say this claim is wildly out of character for Kephart, who had no police record and no history of aggressive behavior or even temper. Kepharts death has galvanized the local community around a problem they say is getting worse: aggressive policing and the souring of relations between civilians and local law enforcement.
While an FBI review of Kepharts death proceeds, the people of Lake Arrowhead are demanding a change in the climate of fear that has grown up in this quiet rural community. Whatever the final outcome of that investigation, the case of Allen Kephart is a case study in how law enforcement can lose the support even of citizens who believe strongly in law and order.
Producers: Tim Cavanaugh and Paul Detrick. Camera and editing: Paul Detrick and Alex Manning
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Just doing the tasing that the SWAT Teams won’t.
Bottom Line: You have to have a terrible character flaw to want to be a cop in the first place.
aww they are just cop haters
everyone knows the cops do things like this for our safety
Have they dropped the Wheeler case altogether? Haven’t heard a word about it in months!
Doesn’t look good does it. This type of behavior wreaks of ‘send a message’ behavior. Do these cowboys honestly see the folks up there as some sort of evil community that needs to be brought back under control? If so, a whole new crew needs to be brought in, one that gasps what their role should be.
Its the Us vs. Them mentality... a great number of cops these days truly believes they are in a war, they just call it a war on drugs, a war on crime. When infact its a war on the public... compounding this problem is the general level of fear your average cop carries while at work.
This is why we are seeing so many unarmed innocent's being shot these days.
The folks in Lake Arrowhead should refuse them service in the local eateries.
Hey, they just want to go home to their families - if if they have to kill you by mistake to make sure they can do that.
Why don’t these guys just do themselves and us a favor and stay home? I’ll take my chances defending myself, thank you.
His view of Cops, as I remember, was: If a person wants really, really wants the job, don't hire him.
In the video it says that when the officer red lighted him, he did not stop and went on for a mile to a gas station.
This tells me that he was frightened to stop and was looking for the protection of having people around at the gas station.
Evidently this pissed the officer off. What I see in the video is a man getting out of his car with his hands up.Am I wrong? Where is the rest of the video, I know it didn’t stop there.
Evidently, he had good reason to be afraid of the police. I wonder if there was prior history between him and the officers.
You and I have gone around on the level of villainy that we each see in law enforcement. I have defended law enforcement, but that doesn’t mean that I don’t think there are ever any problems with it.
This is an instance where I believe there to be a real problem, a real stonewalling, and a very destructive overtone from law enforcement that refuses to fess up, take ownership, and restore the public faith in the department.
Good law enforcement officer hate situations like this, because the multiplier effect is astounding. This incident will be read about far and wide, and it will reinforce mindsets.
That does nobody any favors. Even the officers in that SB Sheriff’s department will suffer immeasurably due to this perception. (and I’m not trying to reference this as merely a perception - there was a real problem here IMO)
The sorry truth is that no one should stop where there are no witnesses, not should they exit the car. Turn on your cell phone and make sure the officer knows he is on record.
Above all, keep your hands where the LEO can see them at all times. Tell the LEO only the basics and remember at all times the present day LEO’s will kill you with virtual impunity for no reason at all.
Consider them a danger to your life and in no way anger the LEO.. Any abuse can be dealt with in a court, where you may be recompensed by the jury, rather than summarily executed by what Oleg Volk accurately termed “Fast Food Industry Rejects, but With Police Powers”.
I suggest electing Police Chiefs and Sheriffs who will run their departments in a strictly Constitutional manner.
PS If on a jury do seriously consider finding such LEOs guilty of murder.
An occasional execution of murdering cops will soon change the behavior of the rest.
According to the family's attorney he had no criminal nor medical history and no history of a temper. All the towns folks said he was your typical polite young man, who's passion was film and videography.
It's easy for a "good law enforcement officer" to "hate this" when it's a few counties or states away.
But when it's in HIS department, and HE was present....the good officer often turns out to have been (ahem) looking the other way at the time.
The problem with these ‘isolated incidents’ of police killing unarmed and cooperative citizens is that with so many of these things happening anymore, they’re no longer isolated incidents. Call it a syndrome, call it a trend. Whatever. But anymore when I hear of a cop getting killed by the side of the road somewhere with the killer driving away I pause and wonder if it was self defense?
Really, if a reasonable but skilled person were stopped by a police officer who had a bee in his bonnet to kill someone would they be out of line killing the police officer in self defense? And after doing so, who in their right mind would wait around for the cops friends to show up and possibly execute him on the spot?
I recall a story from a friend that a Naval officer from Virginia Beach, Virginia was stopped a couple years ago by a Tennessee trooper who didn’t like Navy types and determined to ‘teach him a lesson’. The trooper ended up in pretty bad shape and the officer, a Navy SEAL, went back to Virginia.
So I hear things like cops getting hurt near certain military bases and I just wonder if maybe a bully with a badge ran into some military justice?
In any case, the bottom line here is that the US anymore is becoming a place where you don’t feel safe in some places but you feel even less safe when you see a cop. Just like in most of the rest of the world. Forgive me if I’m not a big fan of that kind of situation.
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