According to this video. The cops shot him in less than 2 seconds.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeP-x-InzE4&feature=youtu.be
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeP-x-InzE4&feature=youtu.be
Seems like it could go either way in this one. Withholding judgment.
It's actually very common.
If it was a robbery,
stuff like that happens unfortunately. :/
If it was just him having a car accident,
then getting shot for it, well, that's sad.
That being said, we don't know if the guy got into an accident, was drunk/high or was there to steal. Will wait for more info before freaking out.
Does it really matter though?
Of course not, but a narrative has to be set from the start to justify murder.
So the cop judged the teen was a threat in 1.3seconds?
So saying ramming a car into a business is a common way of burglary is justifying murder. Alright.
People do. There was a rash of them in the Chicago area over this past holiday. Started with just smashing windows but escalates to taking a van and driving it into the building. People aren't using their own cars mind you. That would be silly.
According to this guy who spoke to witnesses at the dealership, he is saying that he was shot while in his Jeep and THEN drove through the glass window. Reminds me of the Cincinnati shooting. Kill the driver and use their dead body driving away as an excuse why shots were fired.According to this video. The cops shot him in less than 2 seconds.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeP-x-InzE4&feature=youtu.be
According to this guy who spoke to witnesses at the dealership, he is saying that he was shot while in his Jeep and THEN drove through the glass window. Reminds me of the Cincinnati shooting. Kill the driver and use their dead body driving away as an excuse why shots were fired.
According to this guy who spoke to witnesses at the dealership, he is saying that he was shot while in his Jeep and THEN drove through the glass window. Reminds me of the Cincinnati shooting. Kill the driver and use their dead body driving away as an excuse why shots were fired.
I think the cops were called to investigate him stealing a mustang and smashing out the window of the mustang, not the shop. Thats according to that video I quoted though.That makes no sense given the police were called out to investigate the crash (I assume?) in the first place.
That makes no sense given the police were called out to investigate the crash (I assume?) in the first place.
So the cop judged the teen was a threat in 1.3seconds? Damn his training must be amazing.
So much negligence. We need to see that video.According to this video. The cops shot him in less than 2 seconds.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeP-x-InzE4&feature=youtu.be
It's called ram-raiding and it's as old as the hills.The best way to break in, rob someone, and get out cleanly is definitely to drive a car through a building. Wouldn't attract attention at all!
Fuck stupid posts.Fuck White supremacy
Unfortunately there is no video, so we don't know what happened inside the dealership.
It's called ram-raiding and it's as old as the hills.
Fuck stupid posts.
They say burglary. But that makes little sense.
Fuck stupid posts.
By "white supremacy" I do not mean to allude only to the self-conscious racism of white supremacist hate groups. I refer instead to a political, economic and cultural system in which whites overwhelmingly control power and material resources, conscious and unconscious ideas of white superiority and entitlement are widespread, and relations of white dominance and non-white subordination are daily reenacted across a broad array of institutions and social settings.
Mmhm.
"Police racial prejudice" is just part of larger societal prejudices; it isn't unique to (and I'm not even sure it's exceptional in) police. And even where individual police officers are not themselves racist, the incentives built into the system ensures that people simply acting in their own best interest will result in the sort of racial disparities we see. They don't need to be motivated by racism for racist outcomes to be the result.
Aside from the alleged car robbery in progress. I'm curious as to why the cop felt like his life was in such immediate danger that he used lethal force.
Cops never shot Michael De Santa for that.
What I am trying to wrap my brain around... It doesn't make any sense for a single individual to commit a ram raid to steal a car. From what I can tell there is no indication there was anyone else with him. So play it out in your head: you take your own car to a dealership. You steal another car, and.. leave your own car there? Your car that ties you directly to the crime? There is no possible way someone would do that expecting to get away with it, and from the sounds of it he seemed pretty optimistic and hopeful about the future. Are there times that this has happened in the past of people ram raiding and leaving their personal vehicle?
We still need more info but the carjacking story just doesn't make sense to me. Something is off.
What I am trying to wrap my brain around... It doesn't make any sense for a single individual to commit a ram raid to steal a car. From what I can tell there is no indication there was anyone else with him. So play it out in your head: you take your own car to a dealership. You steal another car, and.. leave your own car there? Your car that ties you directly to the crime? There is no possible way someone would do that expecting to get away with it, and from the sounds of it he seemed pretty optimistic and hopeful about the future. Are there times that this has happened in the past of people ram raiding and intentionally leaving their personal vehicle?
We still need more info but the carjacking story just doesn't make sense to me. Something is off.
It's a suspected burglary. Any time an alarm goes off at a closed business, it's instantly a suspected burglary, just because that's usually why people break into businesses at night. If the victim here ran his car into the business for any reason, setting off the alarm in the process, the cops would be responding as though it were a burglary in progress. Please note that burglary is not typically punishable by death, and this is not a defense of the police.
Surveillance video appears to show Christian crashing through the dealerships metal gate, getting out of his SUV and damaging a vehicle in the parking lot, according to the Star-Telegram. He was later seen driving through the showroom glass. When police approached Christian, a scuffle began. The officers went and confronted him, Police Sgt. Paul Rodriguez told the AP. There was an altercation. An officer discharged his weapon and struck the suspect. Christian was pronounced dead at the scene at 1:47 a.m.
Only read the OP but so basically there's little info out? Let's all jump to conclusions
that works both ways for the record
What the fuck does it matter if he was trying to rob the place. Cops should not just be killing people, especially unarmed people. Bunch of fucking pigs
It's called ram-raiding and it's as old as the hills.