I had boys in my 6th grade classes that looked like a freaking man, and had facial hair by the end of the day. Please…..
Seeing as how that doesn't describe Tamir Rice at all, I don't see how that's relevant.
HENCE, why they yelled it 3 times.
And as Rice did not response or even acknowledge this, it either proves that Tamir Rice could not hear him and did not know he was there, or it proves that the officer did not know for certain that Tamir Rice heard him or knew he was there.
Also, I would argue that the fact that Rice was waiving what looked like a gun around and moving in the direction of the officer, but not firing it or even acknowledging the officer when he yelled, proves that the officer's decision was hasty and unreasonable, even in that circumstance.
Look at all of the instances where police officers calmly approach someone who is holding a firearm and manage to disarm them without hurting them? Or all of the instances where officers manage to overpower a dangerous suspect who is wielding firearms, again without harming the person seriously?
If the police in Colorado were able to arrest James Holmes in the movie theater parking lot, just minutes after he shot up a bunch of people and while he was still armed to the teeth with very real guns, without killing or even seriously injuring him, then there's no way that saying the officer who shot Tamir Rice behaved reasonably in that situation will sound like anything other than an excuse.
Well, shooting before you know "for certain" that its a gun, is a hell of a lot better than waiting until you know "for certain" that its a gun, and it is a gun and is fired at you, or others in the park.
I don't want to live in a society where the decision to use deadly force is made that liberally and with such little information.
If I am at the park that I frequent every weekend. And there is ANYONE that is taller than me, I'm 5.3....and is in a cap, etc coming in my direction with something that is OBVIOUSLY a gun, whether it is a play gun or not...and a cop is in the park with me, and does what these cops did... I'm not sure that I would be judging them. I would be hollering, he's got a gun, he's got a gun. I would not be hollering, oooooh wait, wait, ask him if its a toy gun.....oh wait, wait, I think he is under age. Please…[/quote]
I'd hope that law enforcement professionals would have better training in risk assessment than just some person going for a walk in the park.
Again, it was a terrible, terrible thing to happen. A mother has lost her son, and police officers have killed a child. That is horrible, but I do not want the next cop to be KILLED and a son without a father, because they waited too long and what they "thought" might be a toy gun held by a child, ended up being a real gun, held by a child that shot them.
I honestly think that the safety of civilians is more important than the safety of law enforcement professionals. They willingly take a job they know is dangerous that ostensibly exists for the sole purpose of keeping the civilian population safe. If they're placing their own safety over the safety of civilians, then the system is doing the opposite of what it claims its goals are.
Questioning it is fine, seeking to understand it is fine, but automatically placing it in the category of a bias with race, is not.
Why? That's the pattern. It's what the available evidence strongly suggests.