Had to look up citizen's arrests...
Alright, but I'm more interested in hearing how you think it
should work than reading case law on how it typically plays out. I've been taking "the officer is not at fault" and "but he refused to comply" and so on as statements of reasonability on her part, rather than legal or effective immunity.
Of note it does depend on whether a felony was *actually* committed. So a citizen making an arrest better be sure about what they're doing, which I suppose is meant to curb excessive vigilantism.
And how do you feel about that, in relation to whether or not somebody had a gun or being drunk
not mattering?
But in short, yeah I think it works the same.
It's also really not hard, people shouldn't reach for hidden items when they're at gunpoint jeez. That's true whether the armed person is a cop or a robber or a vigilante... Reaching for a concealed item forces the person's hand.
But in your personal opinion, should a robber be able to claim self defense for shooting somebody who does not comply with their orders and conceals their hands? Obviously it's a poor idea on the victim's part, but when they bring the guy in for armed robbery and triple homicide, do you feel the homicides should get thrown out because it was him or them? And if not, why, and what makes cops or vigilantes different?
Of course, most law enforcement situations don't escalate to a gun being drawn. They try to avoid that, because it raises the stakes. But some people are very unwilling to comply :/
And again, why is an arrest with a gun drawn different from going to the pub or the park? If some little kid has her hands in her jacket, what makes that not a potentially lethal situation, whereas if I've got her mother on the ground at gunpoint it would be?
Because if it's the fact that
I've already drawn and therefore escalated the situation, that has some disturbing connotations. If it's that "they're a criminal," likewise. If it's that they failed to comply with my orders, well, I imagine it's not hard to get to that point, and if it's some nebulous legal or authority thing I'd like to hear why you feel that's a good system to have.
And yes, the shot placement and distancing is bizarre.
Yeah I wasn't going to say anything, since obviously he did get shot, but it sure didn't look like it in the video. I swear the second shot seemed to kick up snow a couple feet away, but multiple sites say he got shot twice. Maybe only the first shot actually hit, dunno. Doesn't really matter.
Also that, but I meant her timing; it didn't seem like she fired in response to anything in particular except losing her shit.
He had his hands exposed (a little) but then he moved them back towards him. When she fired they were hidden behind his head.
Right, but he couldn't have had a gun there, so "oh shit he's about to draw on me" doesn't make sense. It's like she just finally freaked out enough to pull the trigger.