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The most heart breaking part for me to watch was how he threw him on the pavement, he may have only got 4 years but he has to live with his actions for the rest of his life
Quote from: Only Lilly on June 09, 2016, 19:18:47The most heart breaking part for me to watch was how he threw him on the pavement, he may have only got 4 years but he has to live with his actions for the rest of his life That's what really got to me as well, and I'm glad the cop was convicted for it. With all the police brutality in the US, why do people continue to provoke cops? If I were in a place where the authorities were known to take harsh actions, I'd be more accommodating if anything. The victim was videotaping the incident on his phone, which suggests that he was expecting to be mistreated and intentionally aggravated the cop to be so. There were so many outcomes of this situation and few of them, if any, positive at all for Bryce. Like the best case scenario would have been to be arrested and go to court, where he would have lost and been fined, as he committed obstruction when he disobeyed stepping out of the car. The car would probably be towed too and he'd have to pay for that as well. And, perhaps the worst consequence of it, it would be harder for him to get a job after being prosecuted. All that trouble to get a viral video about police brutality/mistreatment, and that's his best case scenario. The tazing was actually appropriate in my opinion since he was resisting when the cop tried to pull him out of the car. By that I mean a standard tazing, not for 23 seconds, and the cop was convicted for the duration too. Bryce had so much to lose from his actions. It's a tragedy he chose to gamble with his life
Quote from: Redtunnel on June 10, 2016, 22:03:56Quote from: Only Lilly on June 09, 2016, 19:18:47The most heart breaking part for me to watch was how he threw him on the pavement, he may have only got 4 years but he has to live with his actions for the rest of his life That's what really got to me as well, and I'm glad the cop was convicted for it. With all the police brutality in the US, why do people continue to provoke cops? If I were in a place where the authorities were known to take harsh actions, I'd be more accommodating if anything. The victim was videotaping the incident on his phone, which suggests that he was expecting to be mistreated and intentionally aggravated the cop to be so. There were so many outcomes of this situation and few of them, if any, positive at all for Bryce. Like the best case scenario would have been to be arrested and go to court, where he would have lost and been fined, as he committed obstruction when he disobeyed stepping out of the car. The car would probably be towed too and he'd have to pay for that as well. And, perhaps the worst consequence of it, it would be harder for him to get a job after being prosecuted. All that trouble to get a viral video about police brutality/mistreatment, and that's his best case scenario. The tazing was actually appropriate in my opinion since he was resisting when the cop tried to pull him out of the car. By that I mean a standard tazing, not for 23 seconds, and the cop was convicted for the duration too. Bryce had so much to lose from his actions. It's a tragedy he chose to gamble with his lifeDo you not think that if the cop had been a tad nicer, and friendlier the kid might not have been so scared and more willing to get out of the car? I was stopped by police before and had no clue what I had done wrong, I was terrified and everything was running through my mind.
Do you not think that if the cop had been a tad nicer, and friendlier the kid might not have been so scared and more willing to get out of the car?
Quote from: Cherrycrush on June 11, 2016, 13:38:45Do you not think that if the cop had been a tad nicer, and friendlier the kid might not have been so scared and more willing to get out of the car?He wasn't scared, he was arrogant. The cop asked him to roll his window down both to see him better and to hear him better. After asking him twice to do it without it being done, that's when the cop stopped showing any politeness. I still believe that most police brutality incidences could have been avoided if the victims did not provoke officers beforehand. I'm not condoning brutality, but if you get in the way of someone trying to do their job just because you enjoy being disrespectful, you can't put the blame entirely on the officers.