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re: NYPD Cops Turn Backs on Mayor DeBlasio At Slain Officer’s Funeral

Posted on 12/27/14 at 8:26 pm to
Posted by Mo Jeaux
Member since Aug 2008
58667 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 8:26 pm to
quote:

I am done with those idiiots - The squandered all the good will I harbored for them after 9/11 and the Guliani years. As far as I am concerned they can walk amongst gang violence every day while they look for the last honest cop to smear. Screw em.


Wow. You have a great handle on things I'm sure.
Posted by Tim
Texas
Member since Jan 2005
7052 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 8:40 pm to
quote:

I don't think a slain officer's funeral is the appropriate time or place to make a political statement, regardless of how much they resent or blame de Blasio.


I don't think NFL or college basketball games are a time to make political statements. I don't think burning buildings or screaming for officers to die is the proper way to make a political statement. Screw De Blasio...I wish the NYPD would walk off the job and let the carnage in the city begin. Those bastards deserve everything and anything with the stupidity running that city. So these guys have to pick an "appropriate" time to show support but everybody else in the country can do it when and where they please? Quit being stupid....
Posted by Gulf Coast Tiger
Ms Gulf Coast
Member since Jan 2004
18662 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 8:43 pm to
NYPD didn't want him at the funeral in the first place. They requested that he not come . If you are not wanted at a funeral, don't go. Don't be a funeral crasher
Posted by Zed
Member since Feb 2010
8315 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 8:43 pm to
quote:

It showed police doing what had to be done to take down a man resisting arrest.

Per my link, the NYPD could fire 15% of it's work force, and immediately eliminate 75% of resisting arrest charges.
This post was edited on 12/27/14 at 8:52 pm
Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
119118 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 8:47 pm to
Why would he show up there knowing what would happen? Idiot.
Posted by ChineseBandit58
Pearland, TX
Member since Aug 2005
42576 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 9:07 pm to
quote:

Per my link, the NYPD could fire 15% of it's work force, and immediately eliminate 75% of resisting arrest charges.

That must be one hell of a link. Care to share some of its rationale?

Posted by Wally Sparks
Atlanta
Member since Feb 2013
29153 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 9:08 pm to
quote:

The family should have had Diblasio removed from the service as soon as his sorry arse showed up.



The officer's family asked that he be there.
Posted by Zed
Member since Feb 2010
8315 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 9:12 pm to
quote:

Police departments around the country consider frequent charges of resisting arrest a potential red flag, as some officers might add the charge to justify use of force. WNYC analyzed NYPD records and found 51,503 cases with resisting arrest charges since 2009. Just five percent of officers who made arrests during that period account for 40% of resisting arrest cases — and 15% account for almost 3/4 of such cases.
LINK
Posted by TT9
Global warming
Member since Sep 2008
82952 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 9:19 pm to
As they should.. the guy is a disgrace.
Posted by Asgard Device
The Daedalus
Member since Apr 2011
11562 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 9:38 pm to
quote:

The officer's family asked that he be there.



You think the cops give a crap about the family?
Posted by Tiguar
Montana
Member since Mar 2012
33131 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 10:00 pm to
quote:

TT9


quote:

As they should.. the guy is a disgrace


excuse me while I pick my jaw up off the floor
Posted by ChineseBandit58
Pearland, TX
Member since Aug 2005
42576 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 10:02 pm to
quote:

Police departments around the country consider frequent charges of resisting arrest a potential red flag, as some officers might add the charge to justify use of force. WNYC analyzed NYPD records and found 51,503 cases with resisting arrest charges since 2009. Just five percent of officers who made arrests during that period account for 40% of resisting arrest cases — and 15% account for almost 3/4 of such cases.

On the face of it - that is a pretty damning statistic. If true, then I would agree that some investigation needs to be made into those officers.
Posted by lsu480
Downtown Scottsdale
Member since Oct 2007
92876 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 10:11 pm to
I swear to god if any of my friends try to do political shite at my funeral, regardless of how I died, they are trash.
Posted by the808bass
The Lou
Member since Oct 2012
111513 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 10:52 pm to
quote:

Tying any need for police policy investigation to the Eric Garner ... cases was irrational - in both cases the grand juries did their jobs.


You're not in the real world.
Posted by baybeefeetz
Member since Sep 2009
31635 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 10:54 pm to
Posted by the808bass
The Lou
Member since Oct 2012
111513 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 10:59 pm to
quote:

The Civilian Complaint Review Board released a report Tuesday stating that between July 2013 and June 2014 it received 219 chokehold complaints, a number previously unseen since 2010. From 2006-2010, the agency received over 200 chokehold complaints per ye

LINK
Excessive force and not following policy are hilarious to you. We know.
Posted by ballscaster
Member since Jun 2013
26861 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 11:01 pm to
quote:

It's a small minority,
So why would de Blasio want to retrain the whole department? Your arguments—and his—are without merit.
Posted by baybeefeetz
Member since Sep 2009
31635 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 11:01 pm to
Posted by the808bass
The Lou
Member since Oct 2012
111513 posts
Posted on 12/27/14 at 11:41 pm to
quote:

So why would de Blasio want to retrain the whole department? Your arguments—and his—are without merit.


Over 200 chokehold complaints in a year. Roughly one for every 250 employees. If a business with 1000 employees had 4 complaints for the same violation of policy, they'd probably retrain on it. That's a typical modern corporate environment. Some of the posturing by the police union, while understandable, comes across as petty.

The reality is that the mayor was elected in part because the vast majority of the populace didn't want broken windows policing. The police, for some reason, have seemed loathe to accept this reality.
Posted by ballscaster
Member since Jun 2013
26861 posts
Posted on 12/28/14 at 1:40 am to
quote:

they'd probably retrain on it
Banned in 1993, and crime dropped drastically. Complaints have been on a steady decline since 2008. NYPD has only gotten better over time, and crime has generally dropped year to year. Nevermind those facts--there are races to bait, and de Blasio has made it perfectly clear that he is willing to go so far as to portray, for political gain, the best big-city police department in world history as a problem that needs to be dealt with. This City has only gotten better over the past two decades, but the pussies on the left can't have that. The left depends on problems, tension, poverty, and crime for political power, and de Blasio's treatment of NYPD is an obvious example of it, and the cops ain't havin' it. They're not his chess piece, and hats off to them for crying "bullshite" when appropriate.
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