If they were smart they would have released this as soon as it happened.

JoeBlow5823

Well-Known Member
The officer did what he was trained to do.


The Minneapolis Police Department policy on "Maximal Restraint Technique" says it "shall only be used in situations where handcuffed subjects are combative and still pose a threat to themselves, officers or others, or could cause significant damage to property if not properly restrained."

Nelson also included Minneapolis Police Department training materials on the proper use of the "Maximal Restraint Technique," in which photos show demonstrations of officers simulating putting their knee on a handcuffed subject's neck. Nelson argued the training material appeared to contradict a statement made shortly after the incident by Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo that he had not seen "anything that says you place your knee on someone's neck when they're facedown, handcuffed.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
The officer did what he was trained to do.


The Minneapolis Police Department policy on "Maximal Restraint Technique" says it "shall only be used in situations where handcuffed subjects are combative and still pose a threat to themselves, officers or others, or could cause significant damage to property if not properly restrained."

Nelson also included Minneapolis Police Department training materials on the proper use of the "Maximal Restraint Technique," in which photos show demonstrations of officers simulating putting their knee on a handcuffed subject's neck. Nelson argued the training material appeared to contradict a statement made shortly after the incident by Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo that he had not seen "anything that says you place your knee on someone's neck when they're facedown, handcuffed.
Then maybe the people who trained him were the ones who should first lose their jobs?
 

JoeBlow5823

Well-Known Member
Then maybe the people who trained him were the ones who should first lose their jobs?
Quite possibly. To say the very least, reform to the policy and procedures should be explored. It is likely a policy that is decades old. Not like we can punish the people who wrote it. But we can make sure it improves moving forward.

Pretty sad that the police chief didn't know anything about how his officers are trained to restrain people. Maybe chief should be held accountable. If not for the death then, at a minimum, for the wrongful imprisonment of his officers and inciting riots nation wide. Imagine doing your job as an officer and not having your chief back you up when all you did was follow procedure. You want someone to be mad at? Someone to blame? Shift your focus from the poor bastards on the ground to the people who are in charge of them.

Imagine if someone posted the procedure the officer was taught the day that video went viral. People wouldn't have blamed the cops, they would have blamed everyone above them. Police chief couldn't have that happening so he lied. Ruined his officer's lives over it.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
The officer did what he was trained to do.


The Minneapolis Police Department policy on "Maximal Restraint Technique" says it "shall only be used in situations where handcuffed subjects are combative and still pose a threat to themselves, officers or others, or could cause significant damage to property if not properly restrained."

Nelson also included Minneapolis Police Department training materials on the proper use of the "Maximal Restraint Technique," in which photos show demonstrations of officers simulating putting their knee on a handcuffed subject's neck. Nelson argued the training material appeared to contradict a statement made shortly after the incident by Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo that he had not seen "anything that says you place your knee on someone's neck when they're facedown, handcuffed.
”the murderer was just doing his job” is not the great defense you think it is, bootlicking racist
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Quite possibly. To say the very least, reform to the policy and procedures should be explored. It is likely a policy that is decades old. Not like we can punish the people who wrote it. But we can make sure it improves moving forward.

Pretty sad that the police chief didn't know anything about how his officers are trained to restrain people. Maybe chief should be held accountable. If not for the death then, at a minimum, for the wrongful imprisonment of his officers and inciting riots nation wide. Imagine doing your job as an officer and not having your chief back you up when all you did was follow procedure. You want someone to be mad at? Someone to blame? Shift your focus from the poor bastards on the ground to the people who are in charge of them.

Imagine if someone posted the procedure the officer was taught the day that video went viral. People wouldn't have blamed the cops, they would have blamed everyone above them. Police chief couldn't have that happening so he lied. Ruined his officer's lives over it.
that poor cop
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Quite possibly. To say the very least, reform to the policy and procedures should be explored. It is likely a policy that is decades old. Not like we can punish the people who wrote it. But we can make sure it improves moving forward.

Pretty sad that the police chief didn't know anything about how his officers are trained to restrain people. Maybe chief should be held accountable. If not for the death then, at a minimum, for the wrongful imprisonment of his officers and inciting riots nation wide. Imagine doing your job as an officer and not having your chief back you up when all you did was follow procedure. You want someone to be mad at? Someone to blame? Shift your focus from the poor bastards on the ground to the people who are in charge of them.

Imagine if someone posted the procedure the officer was taught the day that video went viral. People wouldn't have blamed the cops, they would have blamed everyone above them. Police chief couldn't have that happening so he lied. Ruined his officer's lives over it.
I would be more inclined to agree with you if I hadn't seen the fact that white supremacists have infiltrated our police force.

https://torres.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/torres-doj-release-fbi-report-white-supremacist-infiltration-law

Screen Shot 2020-08-31 at 7.24.43 PM.png

With domestic terrorists patrolling our streets using the badge as a shield to put their hate on our fellow citizens, I can't just ignore to go for the easy fall guys at the top. I have too much experience in life here in our country to think it is that cut and dry.
 

JoeBlow5823

Well-Known Member
That sounds like mastitis. You should get that checked out or lactate more often. I heard you can set up an only fans page for that kind of shit.
Meh..... As a professional diamond cutter, i need my two best blades at peak performance at all times.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
The officer did what he was trained to do.


The Minneapolis Police Department policy on "Maximal Restraint Technique" says it "shall only be used in situations where handcuffed subjects are combative and still pose a threat to themselves, officers or others, or could cause significant damage to property if not properly restrained."

Nelson also included Minneapolis Police Department training materials on the proper use of the "Maximal Restraint Technique," in which photos show demonstrations of officers simulating putting their knee on a handcuffed subject's neck. Nelson argued the training material appeared to contradict a statement made shortly after the incident by Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo that he had not seen "anything that says you place your knee on someone's neck when they're facedown, handcuffed.
nope.

Stop gaslighting us. Just stop. We saw the video. He deliberately killed that man in front of a crowd. Your kind are revealing yourselves as outright liars when you deny what we saw with our own eyes. The times have moved beyond that. We saw the video and there is no way that you can tell us we didn't see that cop murder Floyd.
 
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