Kim Potter

Hijinx

Well-Known Member
I read about the mother of this criminal POS and how awful it was.
Al Sharpton called him a Prince.
Yes, this son of a white mother and a black father was such a prize.
He went to a party one night , and didn't leave and spent the night in the apartment of a friend and next morning he held that friend up for$820 dollars while brandishing a pistol. You know---just a helluva nice guy.
A bastard himself he had a bastard child, just your typical dindonuffin youth spreading his semen. Like his daddy before him.
Obviously he was successful at work, His Momma just gave him $50 dollars for gas money just before he was killed.

Yes the prosecution painted a lovely picture of this budding criminal as they brought forth his Momma and daddy who both testified to how nice a little creep he was. After all he hadn't killed anyone yet.

It's a strange thing sometimes we read about police officers shooting a hundred bullets at suspects and no one is hit, but then one stray bullet fired by an officer by accident and it hits this little creep who cannot do what the police tell him and he dies leaving this officer to be found guilty of First and second degree Manslaughter. But that's another thing I don't quite understand. How can one bullet make you guilty of 2 manslaughter charges.?

Well: If it was up to me this woman would be retired from the Police department, Given 150 hr.s of Community service.,and sent home.
 

HemiHauler

Well-Known Member
There is no such thing as an accidental discharge of a firearm, only negligent discharge.

Another porcine reprobate off the streets. No one will shed a tear, save for the taxpayer who has to fund a pension, assuming the conviction doesn’t nullify it, as it automatically should.
 

DaSDGuy

Well-Known Member
In case nobody has posted this before. Standard and recommended positions for sidearms and tasers are the sidearm is worn on the hip on the dominant hand side and the taser is on the other side. That allows a quick draw of the sidearm. You have to reach across your body to pull the taser out. They are never supposed to be worn on the same side.
 

Hijinx

Well-Known Member
In case nobody has posted this before. Standard and recommended positions for sidearms and tasers are the sidearm is worn on the hip on the dominant hand side and the taser is on the other side. That allows a quick draw of the sidearm. You have to reach across your body to pull the taser out. They are never supposed to be worn on the same side.

Nxt time you see an officer take a look at his/her belt. They have so much sh*t strapped on them it must weigh 15 lbs.
Radio's Bullets, Handcuffs, Tasers, Pistols. Too many things. In the old days they had a pistol and a Billy club.
Taser's took the place of Billy Clubs, but more people dies of the Tasers.
Everybody has a camera now and every cop has to be on tape , and yes it looked bad when the Billy club was wailing away on a har head, but few dies from it., and it was a good teacher. The taser goes away in a few minutes , but the lumps stay there for a few days as Educators to a bad move.
 

GregV814

Well-Known Member
There is no such thing as an accidental discharge of a firearm, only negligent discharge.

Another porcine reprobate off the streets. No one will shed a tear, save for the taxpayer who has to fund a pension, assuming the conviction doesn’t nullify it, as it automatically should.
I can think of two, first Alec Baldwins: Nobody pulled the trigger and he wasn't even there...
second, HH's father, he wasnt there either.\\\Plus, AHole, if she paid into the pension plan, she'll get it back lump sum. Now, it may go to her lawyers, but there you go again showing all your lack of insight.
 

Hijinx

Well-Known Member
To me this is criminal. To me locking up Darek Chauvin was criminal.
So far Little Prince Daunte doesn't have a square or a statue, but the plans are probably in motion.

Damn shame this woman makes a mistake , kills a criminal and she becomes a criminal.
Mommy cried over her baby boy, but if she had raised him right he wouldn't be running around robbing people.
She has no empathy for the people he robbed and I have none for her.

Lt. Byrd of the capitol Police deliberately shot a woman with no criminal record. and he walks free.
This lady does her job and gets a prison sentence.
I suppose that the difference between a black officer and a white one.
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron

Dersh knows better than that. People go to jail for negligence that results in a death or injury all the time.
 

HemiHauler

Well-Known Member
I can think of two, first Alec Baldwins: Nobody pulled the trigger and he wasn't even there...
second, HH's father, he wasnt there either.\\\Plus, AHole, if she paid into the pension plan, she'll get it back lump sum. Now, it may go to her lawyers, but there you go again showing all your lack of insight.

Ah yes, I mention porcine reprobate and look who shows up to lick the boots.

You clearly aren’t aware, but there are crimes of which a cop can be convicted that will automatically mean the pension is forfeited. Unfortunately this isn’t one of them, but it should be.

Don’t want to lose your pension ?

Behave yourself when out policing. You have the only job on the planet where you are able to legally separate people from their natural rights. If you “accidentally” pull your firearm when you mean to pull your taser, you don’t deserve the uniform of the badge. Nor do you deserve to live your retirement at taxpayer expense.

BTW, I realize you’re not the smartest fella on the planet, but an employee doesn’t pay into their pension. It is a gift from we taxpayers. You being a net taker, it makes sense that you don’t understand this.

With that said, I wish you the most joyous of mule logs this holiday season.
 

WingsOfGold

Well-Known Member
There is no such thing as an accidental discharge of a firearm, only negligent discharge.

Another porcine reprobate off the streets. No one will shed a tear, save for the taxpayer who has to fund a pension, assuming the conviction doesn’t nullify it, as it automatically should.
So Baldwins gun didn't go off by itself?
 

WingsOfGold

Well-Known Member
Ah yes, I mention porcine reprobate and look who shows up to lick the boots.

You clearly aren’t aware, but there are crimes of which a cop can be convicted that will automatically mean the pension is forfeited. Unfortunately this isn’t one of them, but it should be.

Don’t want to lose your pension ?

Behave yourself when out policing. You have the only job on the planet where you are able to legally separate people from their natural rights. If you “accidentally” pull your firearm when you mean to pull your taser, you don’t deserve the uniform of the badge. Nor do you deserve to live your retirement at taxpayer expense.

BTW, I realize you’re not the smartest fella on the planet, but an employee doesn’t pay into their pension. It is a gift from we taxpayers. You being a net taker, it makes sense that you don’t understand this.

With that said, I wish you the most joyous of mule logs this holiday season.
Meanwhile two colored thugs murdered a female cop in Baltimore last week....................... just can't trust the ugly bastards.
 

GregV814

Well-Known Member
Ah yes, I mention porcine reprobate and look who shows up to lick the boots.

You clearly aren’t aware, but there are crimes of which a cop can be convicted that will automatically mean the pension is forfeited. Unfortunately this isn’t one of them, but it should be.

Don’t want to lose your pension ?

Behave yourself when out policing. You have the only job on the planet where you are able to legally separate people from their natural rights. If you “accidentally” pull your firearm when you mean to pull your taser, you don’t deserve the uniform of the badge. Nor do you deserve to live your retirement at taxpayer expense.

BTW, I realize you’re not the smartest fella on the planet, but an employee doesn’t pay into their pension. It is a gift from we taxpayers. You being a net taker, it makes sense that you don’t understand this.

With that said, I wish you the most joyous of mule logs this holiday season.
HH wrong again...lets just say that I know maybe 1000 people who wore a uniform that paid into a pension plan in lieu of social security. lets just say that like many other people, the SSA recognizes this. so, when that person retires, at 20 years, they start drawing from that private pension fund. not too bad for a human that is in their 40's drawing a pension... for the rest of their lives.
But, here's the thing, if they leave before reaching retirement age they can get a lump sum check, for what they paid in plus interest, however the taxes are skimmed off immediately... Neato eh??
Now, lets say you were incarcerated, do YOU lose your SS payments???
 

HemiHauler

Well-Known Member
HH wrong again...lets just say that I know maybe 1000 people who wore a uniform that paid into a pension plan in lieu of social security. lets just say that like many other people, the SSA recognizes this. so, when that person retires, at 20 years, they start drawing from that private pension fund. not too bad for a human that is in their 40's drawing a pension... for the rest of their lives.
But, here's the thing, if they leave before reaching retirement age they can get a lump sum check, for what they paid in plus interest, however the taxes are skimmed off immediately... Neato eh??
Now, lets say you were incarcerated, do YOU lose your SS payments???

You are missing the point, not that I am surprised. There is not a single penny a cop “earns” which hasn’t been stolen from we who create wealth. None of it is “their money”.

As such, fcking up in such an egregiously negligent way should be extremely painful. So painful that it acts as a deterrent to fck up so badly. Any and all retirement “benefits” should be given to the surviving family of the victim(s) of bad policing.
 

black dog

Free America
There is no such thing as an accidental discharge of a firearm, only negligent discharge.

Another porcine reprobate off the streets. No one will shed a tear, save for the taxpayer who has to fund a pension, assuming the conviction doesn’t nullify it, as it automatically should.

So what do you call a discharge that happens through no fault of the person with the firearm????
 

GregV814

Well-Known Member
You are missing the point, not that I am surprised. There is not a single penny a cop “earns” which hasn’t been stolen from we who create wealth. None of it is “their money”.

As such, fcking up in such an egregiously negligent way should be extremely painful. So painful that it acts as a deterrent to fck up so badly. Any and all retirement “benefits” should be given to the surviving family of the victim(s) of bad policing.
well, there you have it.
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
You are missing the point, not that I am surprised. There is not a single penny a cop “earns” which hasn’t been stolen from we who create wealth. None of it is “their money”.

By your logic (and by logic I mean :crazy: ) the people at the DMV and post office are stealing and their paychecks aren't "their money". Teachers are a bunch of thieves, as are those in the military. EMTs and firefighters - damn their thieving souls! Not to mention road crews, bus drivers, and the guy that cuts the grass at the park.

But now let's do politicians. Not only is their paycheck stolen from we who create wealth, then they confiscate the rest of our money to distribute to their buddies and pet projects. That's what your boyfriend's Build Back Better plan is - a direct assault on the American people to steal their hard earned money and redistribute it to his cronies. I don't see you bitching about that.
 
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