- Reaction score
 - 2,004
 
- Points
 - 1,260
 
Small town SWAT, probably part time, probably a mix of officers who work patrol and who work special units and gear up and go when a call comes.
They have a Facebook page.
Apparently they opened the door with a key.

Small town SWAT, probably part time, probably a mix of officers who work patrol and who work special units and gear up and go when a call comes.
Plausible.I don't want to believe it - Uvalde police now have out of county police around to protect them, as they are afraid.
Yeah, I guess, we have proof that they won't do anything to protect the public, and they are part of the public, so...Plausible.
In Ontario, when the Special Investigation Unit invokes its mandate, it becomes their investigation. The control and dissemination of all information is at the sole discretion of the Director or designee. The actual wording of the relevant section of the Act is; "[The Director] shall preserve secrecy in respect of all information obtained by him or her in the course of exercising a power or performing a duty under this Act." A later section empowers the Director to issue public statements at their discretion, which they seldom seem to want to exercise.4) With how tight lipped they are being with it so far it likely isn’t a good look for police as if it was a good look they would likely be sharing a lot more info.
I haven't read whether the school in Texas had an SRO. In relation to the shooting near the Toronto school, resource officers have been eradicated from the landscape in Toronto and many other Ontario jurisdictions. Parent groups and school boards didn't like the concept, felt the uniforms were intimidating, police scared the children, or some such thing.I realize that the primary role of a school resource officer isn’t to protect the school from a mass shooting. But![]()
Well, when you piss off the citizens of what is probably the most heavily armed State in the Union . . .I don't want to believe it - Uvalde police now have out of county police around to protect them, as they are afraid.
Wrong. Articulate that in court and you're going to prison.Even then, "shoot to wound" is not a thing. It hasn't been for ages. We all know EOF; if you're at the point where you have guns up, you're shooting to kill.
That's more correct.Centre of mass, rounds forward until the threat drops.
That is literally the dumbest thing I’ve heard all week…I haven't read whether the school in Texas had an SRO. In relation to the shooting near the Toronto school, resource officers have been eradicated from the landscape in Toronto and many other Ontario jurisdictions. Parent groups and school boards didn't like the concept, felt the uniforms were intimidating, police scared the children, or some such thing.
There are still parents out there - and I`ve seen them in person - who tell their misbehaving children that "the police will come and take them away" if they don`t behave. I want kids to run towards the police, not away.That is literally the dumbest thing I’ve heard all week…
What’s the point in raising your kids in such a way that they are intimidated by the very people we ask to protect them? How do they realistically thrive in a world where they are kept at a distance from the very instruments of our society?
I wish someone in those jurisdictions had the balls and brains to tell the parents ‘No. we raise your kids during daytime hours, Monday to Friday. They’ll grow up knowing right from wrong, not being scared of the police, and able to write legibly.
I want kids to run towards the police, not away.
That's me as a parent. However I gave up the last time I tried that threat on my daughter and she told me to pull out my cell phone and call the police.There are still parents out there - and I`ve seen them in person - who tell their misbehaving children that "the police will come and take them away" if they don`t behave. I want kids to run towards the police, not away.
That's me as a parent. However I gave up the last time I tried that threat on my daughter and she told me to pull out my cell phone and call the police.
Cool clip. I have no recollection of that. I suppose that means we had no incidents at our school; but I don't remember the radio announcements either. So dramatic! The serious voice over Fanfare for the Common Man.Anyone who does anything to help a child in his life is a hero.
My childhood memory of the police was when they marched us out the flag pole in front of our elementary school. A Metro officer lowered the Elmer flag - indicating a child had been struck. His chrome-yellow police car had a long whip aerial with a black flag.
"The Black Flags are Flying! This is not a tribute to the dead, but a warning to the living!!".
It was a very somber occassion.
( I like the counterman with the cigarette in the Rockwell art.)
Depends a lot on your upbringing and socio-economic class.I was taught as a child that Mr Policeman was my friend. My grandchildren have been taught to avoid them. Sad, but there we are.
I generally treat the police the same way. I have had several poor interactions with them (in Canada and abroad)- so I default to polite with clear hands. So no one is nervous. I don’t think much about this though- if they are honest and calm and I am honest and calm we have no issues.Depends a lot on your upbringing and socio-economic class.
I was brought up in a culture where Omerta was something you followed. Snitches end up in ditches. Cops weren't to be trusted. If you had a problem, you dealt with it or talked to people in the community and it got resolved.
I shit you not, this was 1990s Toronto. I know other ethnic communities that have similar distrust of police based on police from the home country. And honestly, mass media and events throughout North America of police brutality have reinforced the 1312 belief in various communities.
Personally, I have taught my teens to treat cops the same way as you would a K9 Dog : Be polite, Yes Sir/No Sir, "Am I being detained, Sir?" But also....sadly...no sudden movements, keep your hands visible, and if they put hands on you, go limp. As we have seen with George Floyd, and countless other situations.... if things get tense, dog is going to bite.
I understand "Not all cops..." but I view it the same way as weapons safety: Treat every gun as its loaded because it's the time you're complacent that bad things happen.
Two rules of thumb when dealing with police officers, Border Services Officer, Game Wardens etc. are:I generally treat the police the same way. I have had several poor interactions with them (in Canada and abroad)- so I default to polite with clear hands. So no one is nervous. I don’t think much about this though- if they are honest and calm and I am honest and calm we have no issues.