Gunny said:
I live in a black and white world.
I mean no disrespect to LEO's here but you are in fact a civilian. Period. A sworn Peace Officer has the right to arrest but he or she is not military or paramilitary, they are civilians and should (but they are not) be held to the exact same standards as any other civilian. In Dallas and many municipalities cops have days to write their reports.
This was brought about in Dallas because two officers, in separate cars responded to a guy with a knife threatening his mother. When the cops roll up the guy is 50 ft away with a kitchen knife. Both officers forgot to start their cameras strangely enough. The bad guy had rolled out a desk type chair and was standing beside it when one cop shoots at him four times because he was "charging directly towards me". He was a lousy a shot as he was cop, only hit the guy once and it was not a lethal wound.
Rob
Rob,
To correct some misapprehensions here... first we live in a world that is ONLY shades of gray... there is very seldom black or white.
And, as a retired LEO, I am NOT a civilian for the purposes of what we're discussing here. As I honorably retired from my position, Federal and State law allows me to retain my law enforcement certification, provided that I qualify with my firearms as a peace officer annually as required by law. It's an interesting distinction, and I have considerably wider latitude in carry than "civilians." I'm not sure my powers of arrest remain that of a peace officer... which, by the way, only differ from 'civilians' in the ability of a LEO to arrest on 'probable cause.' The rest of us have to
know that an offense occurred and that the person we're arresting committed that offense.
So please don't color all LEOs with the brush that those two morons used. I arrested a Marine as for the rape of a female sailor when I was stationed on Guam forty years ago... does that make ALL Marines rapists? I think not. There are dimwits and numbskulls in EVERY line of work, and law enforcement is no different despite the extensive screening and training. In my first academy class, one of my classmates (a sergeant by then no less) was arrested for doing some sixty commercial burglaries on duty. I've seen co-workers arrested for rape, robbery... the whole gamut. The way to judge an agency is NOT by who commits what crimes on-duty, but how quickly and effectively the agency deals with problem employees who engage in misconduct.
I'm proud that in my 35 years, I was never personally named in a lawsuit for any perceived misconduct; never had a
founded misconduct complaint lodged against me; and for the last 11 years of my career as a Chief, neither of the agencies I ran were sued for any reason nor did I have a
founded misconduct complaint lodged against any of my employees. I am REALLY proud of the people who worked for me.