The buffoon jumped into the path of the vehicle. He coonhounded.
The supervisor on that roadblock should have had that man ziptied in the back of one of his blockade vehicles.
Instead, they're probably lauding him as a "hero".
I wouldn't want that guy anywhere NEAR me with a firearm - hunting, in the street, on a practice range - ANYWHERE.
No...you are completely wrong about this.
He was no bafoon. He was doing exactly what they have been trained to do, and he was willing to risk injury or death to do so.
Please do not knee jerk with such statements.
There was one officer already in position on the right side. When Lavoy drove to the left, this guy came out of his vehicle to position himself on that side and force Lavoy into the snow.
Lavoy had the choice to either run down the officer, or veer further to the left and get his right tires off the pavement into the snow...which is what happened.
But the fact that he was willing to try and go around, and get that close to the officers, would justifiably be taken by those officers as evidence of his being willing to threaten their life to get away.
And that is what happened.
As I say, it is tragic...but these law enforcement people were not bafoons, murderers, or incompetent in the least. They were simply put into a bad situation by their superiors.
They did not need the strips to puncture the tires. They had a virtually impassable road block set up...perhaps they had the strips past that. My guess is that they had another road block beyond that one because we see other cars, near the end, arriving from that direction.