the above video Rolan posted makes the point very clear: nothing excuses walking in to another person's home and shooting an unarmed civilian. If she were a civilian instead of a cop, we would be having a totally different conversation here, firmly in the real world of "it was a flat out crime." We've known since 9/11 that the gung-ho-we're-the-military-now culture of our civilian police force has ramped up. Budgets inflated. Increasing staff. Military-grade weaponry was either bought or given directly to police. APCs. Heavy Machine guns. Stuff that used to be the purview of a S.W.A.T team. The exact culture mentioned above has dominated police thinking since 9/11. "Everyone goes home at night" is their mantra, and fuck how many bodies that creates along the way. The vast amping of police intensity, power and paranoia without the necessary oversight (which is tough to do as every police force in the US is damn near a sovereign entity for how they operate) has come with the obvious consequence: "poor candidates" are pulled in, given training that prioritizes their survival over anything else, and who inevitably escalate to maximum force when they face any real duress. (Or they just straight give in to their desire to kill someone.)
My point is: we've known about this problem forever. Like, it's almost 20 fucking years now. I used to bang the training drum but here's the real truth, I believe: the police enjoy vast amounts of power, resources, the default assumption of public trust and the explicit protection under the law for 98% of what they do whether it's legal or not. They don't have a reason to change. They hold pretty much all the cards. It seems like actual reform of police departments in the US after stuff like Rampart has largely died, and in other cases (like out in the Southwest) police departments have started getting extreme in their methods and their attitude. (Like, nearly open defiance of civilian government.)
It only escalates from here. I think we actually need to disarm and throttle back our policing in America. Not dismantle it, but seriously ask if they need APCs and all this other shit. I'd say they don't need assault rifles but thanks to all the school shootings (haha), I can't actually claim that. It's not a matter of simple reform or better attitudes, I think the gung-ho attitude of cops in general is what has brought us to situations like this. (Although in truth I still think there was something else going on.) The entirety of police culture, and for the public at large, the martyr status we've preemptively given everyone who wears a badge needs to change.
You're really going with the murder angle, where she happened to live in the identical apartment below and had no sign of interaction with the victim? That's fucked up. You're being hateful.
It was murder, no matter how you slice it. At every opportunity she had to stop, think, act like a cop even, she ignored them and a man is dead. If she was so tired and disoriented she couldn't find her own apartment, she shouldn't be a cop. If she'd been a civilian (or a he for that matter) they'd fucking crucify them, and the gun lobby would rip the remainder apart to show how "that's not how you do responsible gun ownership, they don't represent MY fetish!" Instead, because she's white, female, and a cop, people can't seem to hold her accountable for the crime she committed. She was in no imminent danger. And with how many people die in this country to firearms, to excuse something this blatant as even manslaughter is beyond reason. If we can't call this murder, WTF are we supposed to call murder? When they twirl their mustache and go "hehe, you'll never make it stick!" Only people who are literal gun-toting maniacs are murderers? Who cares if she was tired, confused, high on meth, a not-so-secret racist? A fuck load of us out here
don't ever and will never carry a firearm. That's why I personally can't understand how people can try to call this anything but murder. I do not indulge in the power to take a human life in a split second, for protection or the big-dick-ego thrill of it. So the idea that someone could come in to my home and shoot me and get away with murder because "oooo I'm tired" "Oooo I had a hard day" "oooo I was sexting my partner who I've been sleeping with and was too distracted to find the right apartment" makes me.....want to buy a gun. If people are that fucking stupid, egocentric, paranoid, hateful, whatever and people in the US actually think they should get away with that because of some twisted notion of self-defense we've created....I might be tempted to overwrite my respect for human life. That's how bad it's gotten.
We might be the most scared country in the world.