Someone was killed, mate. A child.
A child who was killed because due to his actions. Not an innocent bystander or police officer.
Someone was killed, mate. A child.
This is a picture of the weapon.
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I defy anyone to be able to judge whether that is real or a replica.
OK, honestly, think for just one second. When approaching a person with a firearm who has not only ignored your instructions, but has gone into his waistband and pulled out the firearm, do you really really expect an officer to have to wait until the gun is pointed at him before he can take action? You want an officer, a person with a family and maybe kids of their own, to wait until a suspect is only one finger twitch away from killing him instantly?
I would rather police were certain that a boy with a gun is an active threat before slaying him. If that means waiting until a moment of aggression, so be it (surely kids with toy guns are miles more common than actual murderous children?!). Killing kids with toy guns is not preferable to waiting a few moments to gain absolute certainty. They shot him because he didn't put his hands up - he didn't point the gun at anyone. And he was 12 - a child. If it was sex we were talking about, it would be statutory rape - children that young need added protection from the law, even if it means giving them some benefit of the doubt when apparently carrying a firearm.
Better to kill an innocent then risk an innocent being killed?
How is it better?
Someone was killed, mate. A child.
Why? Because he's black?
In any case, (I'm not exactly clued up on rap, but...) isn't it 20 years since Tupac and Biggie? Are guns even mentioned in modern popular hip-hop any more?
Yes, given that it was a child I'd wait until the last possible second before opening fire.
For all we know the child was scared witless and was in the process of putting it on the floor. That's the thing with assumtion, most on here are assuming he pulling it out and was going to be aggressive. I'dve thought that it was worth the risk, wait to see if either the gun was being raised at me or being put on the floor.
That's the thing with assumtion, most on here are assuming he pulling it out and was going to be aggressive. I'dve thought that it was worth the risk, wait to see if either the gun was being raised at me or being put on the floor.
I'm not ok with it, and regret that they didn't offer the benefit of the doubt. That way, no-one would have died.
I think in that situation, that's up to the police officer to decide. He's the one that has to live with his actions. His life on the line.
I'm guessing that is how the police are trained too. Seeing as we are talking about firearms...
You can't give people who have guns the benefit of the doubt. 'He's reaching for his gun, but don't shoot, he might just wave it around a bit, point it at people, but not shoot, eventually he might lay it on the ground, let's see how this plays out first'.
Suddenly a cop is dead, and the person with the gun is killed anyways...
There aren't many posting in this thread who have 12 year old children. They do stupid things, daily.
It is a sad indictment of the times when people think a child being killed is "justified".
Yeah, let's go around offering people armed with potentially deadly weapons the benefit of the doubt. What a good idea that is.
And then when an innocent bystander is shot and killed by them we can tell their families it's ok, we gave them the benefit of the doubt - your innocent loved one died because we thought the person that did it might be a nice chap after all and decided not to try and defend the public from potential endangerment.
What a moronic idea.
There aren't many posting in this thread who have 12 year old children. They do stupid things, daily.
It is a sad indictment of the times when people think a child being killed is "justified".
Oh come on, it's blatantly obvious he's talking about this specific case.
Like I said, you wait for aggression.
My point was in terms of the treatment of minors. They need the law to make a stronger protective effort, and presumption of innocence. He was 12, ffs. Imagine how a 12-year old reacts in that situation - they don't know the system when you have a police office pointing a gun at you and screaming. He'd just been playing guns with his buddies (or whatever)
He was a 12 year old, who most likely thought he was being a tough guy waiving it at the kids in the playground
Don't replica guns have / need to have an orange tip? (Sorry if this has already been mentioned)