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Police Folk Allegedly Behaving Badly

I have the utmost respect for our law enforcement. You might be suprised at the amount of them I have in my circle.

I could understand people being upset with LEOs if they were going around prejudging everyone and pretending they knew what people would do in a given situation. Especially those they have never met.
In forums like this we only get to see words on a screen.
 
Cops don’t work in a world where they have all the facts. We take people as the prove themselves. In writing or action. If youre a good guy at home and a dickhead when you’re in public, then it’s irrelevant that you’re a good guy at home when we are dealing with each other in public.
 
There's another one on the way, honest... (Connecticut based incident, apparently...)


This is a good thing. Zero chance of the perp reoffending and assaulting anyone else. Or costing us thousands for incarceration. Nobody but family cares. I don't care if the cop took the meat wagon, he chased down and killed an armed, dangerous convicted criminal. He ran towards the fire, which gives him priority, no matter the injury.
 
This is a good thing. Zero chance of the perp reoffending and assaulting anyone else. Or costing us thousands for incarceration. Nobody but family cares. I don't care if the cop took the meat wagon, he chased down and killed an armed, dangerous convicted criminal. He ran towards the fire, which gives him priority, no matter the injury.
Played the race card too.
 
There's another one on the way, honest... (Connecticut based incident, apparently...)

Not familiar with Connecticut triage protocol.

But, in Ontario, paramedics would be explaining to their Department, and your Base Hospital Medical Director, and at the coroner's inquest , why they triaged a a panic attack a higher priority than a GSW - if they hoped to keep their jobs.

Based on a 2022 news report of a GSW call in Hamilton, ON , paramedics might even be looking at possible jail time. "Guilty of failing to provide the necessities of life."

The Crown had argued the two men should each be incarcerated for 2½ years.

Probably in a civil lawsuit against the City as well.

I read the family in Connecticut has launched a $40 million lawsuit.

YES, it is understood patients with the highest triage priority are not always the nicest, or the ones you side with.

In addition to an instinctive emotional reaction, paramedics also have medical - legal triage responsibility .

Paramedics reported that Perrotta declined treatment in the ambulance.

“I am fine, I just needed to get out of here,” she said, according to the report.
 

That's a given OS. Like screaming I can’t breath, over and over. Doesn’t sound like the person is incapable of breathing if they can keep screaming.
Proclaimed by a number of victims . . . just before they died, from either a knee in the back or positional asphyxia.

Just think of all the money society could save if we just let the cops shoot people. Save all those silly courts.
/s
 
Not familiar with Connecticut triage protocol.

But, in Ontario, paramedics would be explaining to their Department, and your Base Hospital Medical Director, and at the coroner's inquest , why they triaged a a panic attack a higher priority than a GSW - if they hoped to keep their jobs.
The answer is simple. The man with a gun asked for a ride.
 
The answer is simple. The man with a gun asked for a ride.

It was a woman.

Paramedics reported that Perrotta declined treatment in the ambulance.

“I am fine, I just needed to get out of here,” she said, according to the report.

If triage priority is as simple as that, the family's $40 million lawsuit against the City of Bridgeport should be a slam dunk.

Attorney Darnell Crosland, representing the family, announced intentions to file a $40 million lawsuit against the City of Bridgeport.
 
It's a fair cop, m'lud...


Nine officers at UK's busiest police station suspended amid gross misconduct investigation

Nine officers at the UK's busiest police station could be sacked in an investigation into allegations of excessive force on prisoners, misogyny and inappropriate behaviour.

One officer, a police constable, is also being investigated for the potential criminal offence of perverting the course of justice after an undercover TV exposé.

The officers, from Charing Cross police station near Trafalgar Square in central London, have been suspended by Scotland Yard.

They are the subject of a gross misconduct investigation by the watchdog the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC).

Two others, a former Met officer and a civilian staff worker, are also facing the same disciplinary charge which could lead to dismissal.

Another serving officer has been told they are no longer being investigated because it was thought their behaviour did not breach professional standards.


 
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