Skull Pilot
Diamond Member
- Nov 17, 2007
- 45,446
- 6,163
Oh quit trying to turn the story around. Like I said if he got tazed which is legal. He would've had a heart attack, so either way he would be dead. The officer will lose his job. I guess if your speeding and get into an accident, and the person you hit dies. You will volunteer to go to jail for murder? That's exactly what you want for the officer.Like I said if the law breaker did as the cop said in the first place. He would still be able to commit his crimes.The fact is, if he did as he was told. He would be alive today. He CHOSE not to comply.
Police broke their own policies and he died because of it...
So no trial or appeals... Death Penalty served immediately...
Ehh???
Thats called
- Vehicular homicide (also known as vehicular manslaughter in the United States), is a crime that, in general, involves the death of an individual as a result of the negligent operation of a vehicle. It is comparable to the offense of dangerous driving causing death in some countries.
We say this cop broke procedure which means he broke the law. As a law enforcement officer polices and procedures are the law as it grants them special privileges to allow them to enforce the law.
The officer should have been tried for:
He was not allowed to perform chokeholds on citizens because of the high risk of death to the receiver. There was a policy against that, now all NYPD officers can do chokeholds during all arrests. Actually the policies of the NYPD don't matter too, so now the NYPD has no policies...
- Negligent homicide is the killing of another person through gross negligence or without malice. It often includes death that is the result of the negligent operation of a motor vehicle, which includes the operation of a boat or snowmobile. It is characterized as a death caused by death by conduct that grossly deviated from ordinary care. Negligent homicide may be charged as a lesser-included offense of manslaughter. It is also sometimes referred to as "involuntary manslaughter". State laws vary, so local law should be consulted for specific requirements.
The point is not all homicides are murder. A murder charge has intent as a necessary component.
But we all know that Garner died of a heart attack in the ambulance not from the choke hold.