Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Ok what blows all the theories for the cops side out the window is the fact that he pulled them over in the hospital parking lot. How many crimes do you hear of where somebody plans to rob a bank, kill someone, kidnap someone in a hospital parking lot? Nobody. What is worse is when he did get out of his car, the wife was in hysterics screaming her mom is dying and she went into the hospital. She didnt try to run through the bushes, she ran into the ****ing hospital.
How many people can get away from a police officer in the hospital? Now the husband is saying he needs to go in there and the officer is being a dick. I dont give a ****, he is in no danger what so ever being in a hospital parking lot because nobody plans to shoot anybody there. You now have two people in hysterics over this and the cop still wants to take his sweet time and give a ticket. Its bull. Its racism, theres no other way around it.
And houston to respond what does a persons religious beliefs have to do with a matter, well its a lot if youre atheist. I feel like once your gone, you are gone, so I would like to be their in a persons lasts moments to say goodbye because they are not going to hear that once they are gone. Thats why I said it threw me for a loop that fili has no regard for somebody in their last stages of life.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ragecage
And houston to respond what does a persons religious beliefs have to do with a matter, well its a lot if youre atheist. I feel like once your gone, you are gone, so I would like to be their in a persons lasts moments to say goodbye because they are not going to hear that once they are gone. Thats why I said it threw me for a loop that fili has no regard for somebody in their last stages of life.
I don't think that has anything to do with religion. A religious person is going to want to be there just as much as a non-religious person. That's just human nature.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
please no religious debate :'(
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Excellent!
This thread as given me insight as to how to commit the perfect crime.
All I need is a bank in reasonable proximity to a hospital parking lot.
I rob the bank. Make like a bat out of hell until I get to the hospital.
The only irrational cop in America who would dare to question me is on suspension in Dallas so if any other officer of the law approaches me I will simply start ranting about how dare he impede me as my mother-in-law is dying in the hospital and presto! I'm off scott free
:rolleyes:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ragecage
Ok what blows all the theories for the cops side out the window is the fact that he pulled them over in the hospital parking lot.
Keep in mind one of my first posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by
filihok
What we don't know is where was the traffic light the guy ran compared to the hospital parking lot.
Did he run the light directly into the lot? Did he run the light and drive 3 blocks into the lot? The cop was there. And Moats was there in an emotional state. You don't know what happened there other than a couple words from an article on Yahoo! sports.
Maybe you should tone down your judgement until you know all the facts, which will likely be never
Now, AFTER watching the video, it appears that Moats didn't pull over for some time after the officer first attempted to pull him over.
That's a mistake on Moats' part. Because your mother-in-law is at the hospital dying isn't a reason to disregard traffic laws (running the red light) and disregard an officer trying to pull you over.
I don't know for certain, and neither do you, but PERHAPS if Moats had pulled over immediately and explained the situation this whole incident would have gone down differently.
Say what you want, but refusing to pull over when an officer signals you is a BAD IDEA.
Quote:
How many crimes do you hear of where somebody plans to rob a bank, kill someone, kidnap someone in a hospital parking lot? Nobody.
Your near unintelligible sentence here ("How many?" "Nobody" ??? Rob a bank in a hospital parking lot???) doesn't prove anything. If you think that a crime has never occurred in a hospital parking lot, I'd be willing to bet you a large sum of money that you are not correct.
Quote:
What is worse is when he did get out of his car, the wife was in hysterics screaming her mom is dying and she went into the hospital. She didnt try to run through the bushes, she ran into the ****ing hospital.
How many people can get away from a police officer in the hospital? Now the husband is saying he needs to go in there and the officer is being a dick. I dont give a ****, he is in no danger what so ever being in a hospital parking lot because nobody plans to shoot anybody there.
Wrong.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29835093/
Quote:
Man Shot In Hospital Parking Lot Standoff
HOUSTON - A man was hospitalized after a standoff with police in a hospital parking lot, KPRC Local 2 reported.
Webster police said an injured man was in the parking lot of Clear Lake Regional Medical Center at about 11 p.m. Sunday.
Webster Police Chief Ray Smiley said Steve Moran's father took him to the hospital after Moran had been involved in multiple hit-and-run collisions in Houston.
"The father went inside to summon medical aid," Smiley said. "When the medical aid from inside the hospital went out, the man pointed something at them and told them in language I can't use here that they needed to get away or he would kill them."
Moran repeatedly threatened to shoot officers, investigators said.
So let's see.
There was a shooting in a hospital parking lot. A man threatened to shoot a police officer in a hospital parking lot.
When and where did this happen?
Sunday, March 22nd in Houston Texas
When and where did the Moats incident happen?
March 18th in Dallas Texas.
Interesting. I guess that it is not unheard of in the state of Texas for their to be violence threatened against police officers in hospital parking lots.
In the article that I posted
A car drove to the hospital parking lot. One individual exited the car and entered the hospital
In the article that you posted
A car drove to the hospital parking lot. One individeual exited the car and entered the hospital
In the article that I posted
When the hospital staff went to assist the individual remaining in the car he threatened to kill them.
In the article that you posted
The individual remaining in the car was concerned about the well-being of his mother-in-law.
What more do I need to say. Two nearly identical situations with two very different outcomes. An officer needs to be prepared for anything to happen.
To summerize, Rage, your argument that nobody ever commits violence in hospital parking lots is
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ragecage
bull
Some more websites with information regarding violence in hospitals.
Quote:
Hospital Watch
As crime increases across the board, hospitals have not been immune. In fact, hospitals today witness more than their share of violence and crime - shootings inside hospitals, altercations between rivals in the lounges, kidnapping, baby switching and pilfering.
As a result of several such tragic instances, Hospital Watch was developed by the Crime Prevention Unit in conjunction with the Southeastern Safety/ Security Health Care Council of North Carolina.
This program specifically addresses security issues unique to the hospital environment and coordinates the efforts of law enforcement, hospital security and hospital staff to create a safer atmosphere in and around hospitals. The immediate goal of Hospital Watch is to reduce crime in hospitals by teaching the staff basic crime prevention. The secondary goal is for the staff to take this information to their homes and continue to practice solid crime prevention by organizing and participating in their own Community Watch program.
By learning and practicing fundamental crime prevention techniques, Hospital Watch seeks to significantly reduce the likelihood that anyone will be victimized by crime while in a hospital. Hospital staff and security personnel are trained in much the same manner as are Community Watch volunteers. Hospital personnel are trained to observe, challenge and report any suspicious activity, but not to intervene in dangerous situations. (Technical assistance available.)
http://www.gcc.state.nc.us/Crime_Pre...community.html
http://www.iahss.org/
Quote:
Originally Posted by ragecage
You now have two people in hysterics over this and the cop still wants to take his sweet time and give a ticket.
I absolutely agree with you. After the officer was informed that Moats' mother-in-law was in fact in the the hospital he should have acted differently.
Quote:
Its bull. Its racism, theres no other way around it.
There is another way around it. See above
Quote:
And houston to respond what does a persons religious beliefs have to do with a matter, well its a lot if youre atheist. I feel like once your gone, you are gone, so I would like to be their in a persons lasts moments to say goodbye because they are not going to hear that once they are gone. Thats why I said it threw me for a loop that fili has no regard for somebody in their last stages of life.
[delete] [delete] [censer] [delete]
Ahem...I would appreciate that you don't assume that I have 'no regard for somebody in their last stages of life'. That is quite frankly not the case.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Fili,
You are wrong.
Plain and simple.
Wrong.
Sometimes you seem to want to take a side just to see how it feels.
This is unacceptable behavior from a cop, and you can spin like Fox News if you want to, it doesn't change it.
And he is going to get fired.
So keep debating all you want.
And I hope you're never in an emergency situation and run accross a bad cop.
Well, maybe after reading your posts, I hope you do.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
And yes, that was totally just being a smartass post. :o
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Quote:
Originally Posted by
OldFatGuy
Fili,
You are wrong.
Plain and simple.
Wrong.
Sometimes you seem to want to take a side just to see how it feels.
This is unacceptable behavior from a cop, and you can spin like Fox News if you want to, it doesn't change it.
And he is going to get fired.
So keep debating all you want.
And I hope you're never in an emergency situation and run accross a bad cop.
Well, maybe after reading your posts, I hope you do.
OFG, you are wrong. Plain and simple.
I wish you the best
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Quote:
Originally Posted by
filihok
OFG, you are wrong. Plain and simple.
I wish you the best
Nope, not this time.
Dude, you can post all the theory you want about threat and this and that.
The real world is not black and white, it's all sorts of shades of gray.
Our police officers need to be able to use sound judgement and make good calls in all these shades of gray. Which is why they are trained.
We, as a society, can't have cops with Rambo complexes, anymore than we can have cops with happy trigger fingers. They are there to protect AND SERVE.
I tried to be funny, but failed.
You tried to take a losing argument, but failed.
I wish you the best to.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
I am not saying that the cop was completely right. I've never said that, and I've said that at a point he was flat out wrong.
I'm saying that from the moment he first saw the car run the light until some point after that, he has to treat the situation as dangerous.
Moats also ****ed up in this situation. But, because his mother-in-law was dying, he gets treated as faultless.
That's my point, the situation isn't as black and white as the cop ****ed up and Moats did nothing wrong.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Moats turned on his four way flashers, slowed down and checked traffic before running the red light, and didn't stop when the police officer turned on his lights. (Although from the video, it appears to me the cop didn't even catch up to him until he was ready to turn into the hospital parking lot).
All technically (in a black and white world) wrong.
Now, if next week my mother goes into convulsions while I'm taking her to the grocery store, I'm going to do every one of those things (and more, because I'm going to break the speeding limit too). And I too will have my four way flashers on (like he did), and will keep going until I get to the hospital.
And when I get there, if that cop pulls a gun, he had better shoot, and he had better not miss. Otherwise, I'm not dealing with him, I'm carrying my mother into the emergecy room.
And you know what??? If that occurred, I'm 99.9% sure the cop would understand (and probably not even write a ticket, although he may) and try to help. And if he wrote the ticket, it would be AFTER my mom was in the ER. That's because 99.9% of cops are decent, and they're all well trained.
No, that isn't EXACTLY the situation above. But it's similar enough.
The fact you're insisiting on overlooking is race. I don't know if it's because you consider it not a factor until proven a factor, or what. But I've lived in Texas, and I know race is ALWAYS an issue there. I'd bet you could google "Dallas Police" and "Race relations" and get a thousand hits. I'll try after posting this.
This was a white cop, pulling over a black male. And I don't have to wait for "proof" that race was a factor. That may not be fair, but neither is racism. I can't prove race was a factor any more than you can prove it wasn't, but it just seems to me this is the biggest point of the situation that you refuse to acknowledge.
So, I'll ask you this.
If it comes out later that this same cop was a card carrying member of the KKK, and had posted racist remarks all over the internet using various aliases, would that at all change you view of how he handled this?
And I'm sorry about my smartass post above, I was trying to be as snarky as possible, but instead of making my point in a funny, albeit with a sharp point, way, it didn't work (and usually doesn't for me in this medium, my snarkiness always comes off as simply snarky with no humor.) I need to work on not doing that.
But when issues have the possibility of affecting me personally, I take them more seriously. I can easily envision the scenario I posted above. Easily. And if I'm unlucky enough to get that 0.01% bad cop in my scenario, then both my mom and I will likely die, because I'm NOT going to put up with any ******** from a cop while trying to get my mother to a hospital. And as Americans, we don't have to. We don't give our cops unlimited, unquestioned authority. They have rules too.
And I still wish you the best.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Quote:
Originally Posted by
OldFatGuy
So, I'll ask you this.
If it comes out later that this same cop was a card carrying member of the KKK, and had posted racist remarks all over the internet using various aliases, would that at all change you view of how he handled this?
No.
I've never had training as a police officer, but I have had training as an EMT/First responder. One of the first things you are taught is to control the situation.
When you attempt to pull a car over, the car refuses for the amount of time that Moats did, when it finally pulls over people immediately jump out screaming and running around, that is not control of the situation. At that point the cop has every right and responsibility to assure his safety and the safety of anyone else around.
THIS is the point where the cop did a bad job. He didn't handle the situation at all well from there.
He needs to cautiously and quickly ascertain what is going on.
Was he affected by the race of the occupants of the car? Maybe. Maybe not. Regardless, he didn't do a good job.
The point where I disagree with rage (and others) is his saying that 'nothing bad ever happens in a hospital and the cop should have just let them go'.
I don't think that is correct. Rage is definitely incorrect to say that nothing ever happens in a hospital parking lot. We know that. The officer has to figure out what is going on.
If the cop HAD just let them go into the hospital and they HAD shot someone then what story would we have?
"Cop doesn't do his job. Lets criminal walk into hospital and open fire. The cop was asked why he let an armed person walk into a hospital and open fire he replied, "they were very hysterical and told me that their mom was inside" so I let them go". I bet we'd have a problem there too.
If Moats pulls over immediately, he probably gets a police escort to the hospital and we don't have a story.
While you may take an issue more seriously if it has a possibility of effecting you, I don't. I try to weight issues regardless of the personal impact that they have. A lot of things that will never effect me are more important than a lot of things that will...
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Well, first of all, Moats didn't delay for a long time. If you watch the video, it was quite some time before the cop caught up to Moats. You are NOT required to pull over the second blue lights appear in your rear view. If the blue lights are 1/2 mile behind you, you don't pull over right away.
In fact, IIRC, by the time the cop pulled up behind him, he was almost in the hospital.
So, I'm not sure where you're getting the "refuses for the amount of time Moats did" from. I'm going to go watch it again, but I could've sworn the police car didn't pull up behind him until he was almost in the hospital parking lot.
Secondly, I definitely disagree with your whole take on how cops should approach situations. It sounds like to me you're suggesting they treat every situation as a threat. I think they should treat every situation as a potential threat, but not treat everyone as a an actual threat until there's a reason to.
And rushing into a hospital with four way emergency flashers isn't a reason to assume an actual threat. If I'm observing a car with four way emergency flashers on rushing into a hospital, my initial observation is going to be it's some sort of an emergency, not it's some sort of threat. This is where good judgement comes in.
And yes, that makes cops vulnerable. They know this and accept this and are trained for it. They are there to protect AND serve, and not to treat everyone and everything as a life or death threat, even though it may well be.
It's a tough job, and an unfair one. But it is what it is, because we can't accept cops with guns and badges and unlimited authority without using good judgement. We must insist on that.
But, I'll leave now. For real this time. Sorry about that last time. Sometimes with your intellect it's difficult for me to tell when you're doing something because you really believe it and when you're doing something just as some sort of mental challenge to take another position. Whatever, knock yourself out.
The fact is when things might affect me personally I do care, because when they don't affect me personally, I don't. You could be standing on your head naked, doing drugs, and jerking off to Frank Sinatra right now and I DON'T CARE. I try to keep my nose out of things that don't concern me. If I'm on my way to the hospital with my mother and this cop or one like him pulls this crap on me, then you'll get to see OFG in the news. Because he's going to have to kill me.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Quote:
Originally Posted by
OldFatGuy
Well, first of all, Moats didn't delay for a long time. If you watch the video, it was quite some time before the cop caught up to Moats. You are NOT required to pull over the second blue lights appear in your rear view. If the blue lights are 1/2 mile behind you, you don't pull over right away.
http://law.onecle.com/texas/transpor...45.156.00.html
Quote:
§ 545.156. VEHICLE APPROACHED BY AUTHORIZED EMERGENCY
VEHICLE. (a) On the immediate approach of an authorized emergency
vehicle using audible and visual signals that meet the requirements
of Sections 547.305 and 547.702, or of a police vehicle lawfully
using only an audible signal, an operator, unless otherwise
directed by a police officer, shall:
(1) yield the right-of-way;
(2) immediately drive to a position parallel to and as
close as possible to the right-hand edge or curb of the roadway
clear of any intersection; and
(3) stop and remain standing until the authorized
emergency vehicle has passed.
(b) This section does not exempt the operator of an
authorized emergency vehicle from the duty to drive with due regard
for the safety of all persons using the highway.
http://law.onecle.com/texas/transpor...45.204.00.html
Quote:
§ 545.204. STREETCAR APPROACHED BY AUTHORIZED EMERGENCY
VEHICLE. (a) On the immediate approach of an authorized emergency
vehicle using audible and visual signals that meet the requirements
of Sections 547.305 and 547.702, or of a police vehicle lawfully
using only an audible signal, the operator of a streetcar shall
immediately stop the streetcar clear of any intersection and remain
there until the authorized emergency vehicle has passed, unless
otherwise directed by a police officer.
(b) This section does not exempt the operator of an
authorized emergency vehicle from the duty to drive with due regard
for the safety of all persons using the highway.
Maybe 'immediate approach' could be argued. But, IMO, it's common sense that if a police car is behind you, and you can see hit lights and hear his siren, you pull over.
As someone who's gone on a few ride alongs in ambulances and fire trucks, it's much better if you pull over too early than too late.
Quote:
The fact is when things might affect me personally I do care, because when they don't affect me personally, I don't. You could be standing on your head naked, doing drugs, and jerking off to Frank Sinatra right now and I DON'T CARE. I try to keep my nose out of things that don't concern me.
Quote:
“They came first for the Communists…but I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a communist. Then they came for the Jews…but I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. Then they came for the Unionists…but I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Unionist. Then they came for the Catholics…but I didn’t speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me…and by that time there was no one left to speak for me.”
I know that this quote is intended to be used against government, but it works here too...sometimes it's ok to be concerned about something that doesn't directly involve you.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
I laughed when you actually took the time to google search crimes and hospitals. Give me a break. :rolleyes: Oh and listen to your elders fili, cuz they are usually onto something (OFG). :D Have a wonderful day.
Re: Dallas Police Delayed NFL Player as Relative Died
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ragecage
I laughed when you actually took the time to google search crimes and hospitals.
That's ok, because I laughed when you didn't ;)
You think it's funny to know what you're talking about, and I think it's funny to talk out of your ass.
To each their own