Really you don't know nothing about me how would you know what i have a clue on.
And neither you have a clue about me!
Really you don't know nothing about me how would you know what i have a clue on.
And neither you have a clue about me!
OK man we even no problem.
From the start of the incident, well before he was laying on the ground, Floyd was complaining he couldn’t breath. How were the police to know when Floyd was no longer crying wolf and was really having trouble breathing?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Thanks. I honestly have not made any attempt to follow the case and know only what I’ve been inadvertently exposed to. If the guy was really that bad then it was likely going to happen eventually. I imagine in this day and age a cop without any complaint record would be a rarity, but I’m sure it’s all about how they are dealt with by their superiors. In the medical profession the checks and balances don’t always work either, as a physician can be reported by anyone, but it generally takes a peer review to accomplish anything unless the person is reported to law enforcement for criminal acts. Less than that and they can go on committing malpractice for a time. It all comes down to whether or not people want to stick out their neck and do the right thing or turn their head and let the good doctor move on to become a problem somewhere else.He did not tell his side of the story because he did not take the stand. That is typical in a murder case.
I think his side of the story is that he was having too much fun listening to Floyd’s pleas for mercy and calls to his mother. Sadistic sociopaths enjoy torturing people and hearing them suffer. That would explain his record of brutality complaints which establishes a pattern of behavior. There probably was not an early warning system for that department.
From the start of the incident, well before he was laying on the ground, Floyd was complaining he couldn’t breath. How were the police to know when Floyd was no longer crying wolf and was really having trouble breathing?
Well looks like they lost that gamble didn’t they? They lost big time! Ignoring the medical needs of suspects is a great way to become a defendant or lose your job.
They ignored their first aid training and then ignored a trained EMT/Firefighter who offered to help them. It is not a good idea to interfere with a medical professional who tries to help. If you are a narcissistic cop with a god complex, then you are headed for serious trouble. If you wish to deny that, then you are pretending that yesterday never happened.
So like, he told them he couldn’t breathe and they chose not to believe him? I don’t know, I’m still curious as to the need for a knee on the neck after he was cuffed and face down. I’ve seen what I believe to be all the video at this point and it all looks the same to me. Looks like the guy was putting as much of his weight as he could on the knee in question and just waiting. Just biding time. Like nothing was really happening at the time. Like he was taking a pause. No loading Floyd into a cruiser to take him in or anything. Nobody seemed to be fighting or struggling. Just waiting on him to, idk, stop breathing maybe? Maybe he was just holding him there waiting for more cops so they could put him in the car. I wish I could hear his side of the story. I’m sure he had some good reasons, right? Did he take the stand in his own defense? So many unanswered questions.
I figured guilty of manslaughter but not all 3.
Flyboy, George Floyd very likely had sensation of asphyxiation. Im a Respiratory Therapist and I know a bit of pulmonary physiology. You see, breathing is comprised of ventilation and circulation. When officer Chauvin was kneeling on Floyds neck for many minutes the blood flow through the carotid arteries and jugular vein was compromised. There are chemoreceptors located in this area that control heart rate and respiration. Doing this to a person that has cardiac disease to begin with will overwork his diseased heart trying to overcompensate due to lack of oxygen to the brain and chemoreceptors, causing cardiac arrest. It is not true that just because someone can speak, that they are properly breathing.
Wonder what kind of sentence the judge will dish out?
In the last case I remember a drunk/high off duty cop stumbled into the wrong apartment and killed a man eating ice cream. I think they found her guilty of involuntary manslaughter? I’m probably wrong there, but a 6 year prison sentence, speculation was she’d be out in 2. But that was totally the guy’s fault for not locking his door, right? So this cop was on duty, 2nd degree unintentional murder, perp was loaded, packing drugs, what was he doing, robbing a store or something? Can’t remember, anyway, I’m guessing 10 years. Just a round figure off the wall guess. I got no idea how I came by that number. I’m guessing there’s no qualified immunity in that state? What about turning in his badge for reduced time? Could that work here? Or too late?
Whatever prison he goes to will definitely have to keep him away from the population. He’ll have his own private cell. No way he’d survive general population. I bet there’s a line out the back door of guys who wanna put a knee on this dude. Can y’all imagine if George Zimmerman had gone to prison? How long would he have stayed alive I wonder...
Yeah, I’m thinking this guy is toast.
This officer was politically "lynched".