you know your argument fails when the "what's next" post enters the discussion. the old falling dominoes theory, that says if we do this, it is going to cause that, which is worse.
I'm not the one who charged Dean with murder, his fellow Police officers arrested him for that.
you conveniently ignore what I posted about Atatiana possibly having her gun pointed at Dean, which makes murder much less likely.
Originally Posted by Chung Tran
i didn't conveniently omit anything. i read the news that the victim did have a gun in her hand. given the actions of the cops, that is understandable. what would you do if you heard someone, unknown and unannounced, in your backyard? i'd call 911 and get my S&W .357 magnum out.
the author of the cited article wrote "what's next" i just agreed with it.
you must have a long and unsavory history with law enforcement to be such a "cop hater". lucky for me i don't. i don't "like" getting pulled over for a traffic violation but i don't blame the cop for it when i damn well know i was speeding.
Comparing what that idiot cop did to MD's is foolish. They have to be licensed and board certified for their craft. In addition, they go through years of education for their craft. This idiot only has to go through half ass police training and he is handed a gun to kill.
It's one thing for a doctor to have human error for a wrong diagnosis or a bad surgery while trying to help someone, it's another thing for an idiot trigger happy cop killing someone in her own home because he is too fucking stupid to simply knock on the front door and ask questions.
Originally Posted by Lucas McCain
it is exactly the same. both are acting as a professional. explain why a Doctor gets a "free pass" as medical malpractice and a cop by default commits murder? and by the way, a Doctor with a history of malpractice can lose their license thus ending his or her career. even without losing a medical license if they can't obtain medical malpractice insurance they risk personal liability to continue practicing medicine.
You have no concept of how the law works. Quit embarrassing yourself. Unless he accidentally pulled the trigger, of aimed away from the person in the house, he intended her death. He doesn’t have to come up to the house with the preexisting, ludicrous idea that “Gee, I think I’ll kill someone on this call.” You point a loaded gun at someone and pull the trigger, you intend their death.
When the defendant testifies, even easier. What did you expect to happen when you pulled the trigger? You had the gun pointed at the victim, correct? Did you aim before you pulled the trigger? There dozens if questions the defendant will look like an idiot on if he fails to give the answer that shows intent.
Texas Penal Code 6.03 (a)
“ A person acts intentionally, or with intent, with respect to the nature of his conduct or to a result of his conduct when it is his conscious objective or desire to engage in the conduct or cause the result.”
You conscious objective was to kill the victim when you shot her, correct?
No, the what did you intend when you shot her?
Piece of cake.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
please post your area of legal expertise. from your prior posts i am pretty certain you are not a criminal defense lawyer, right?
as you know ... there is no such thing in law school as an area of expertise. you learn all areas of law, criminal, civil, corporate. all lawyers fresh out of law school aren't experts in any area of law. they have a general knowledge of all law, then they decide what area they go in and work to become an expert. they do that by doing the legal grunt work for more experienced lawyers and thus became an expert.
you should know better than to cite a legal statute that applies to criminal law and infer that a police officer as a professional authorized to take actions by default has criminal intent when they act and use deadly force. by your incorrect citation of law all cops are murderers by any action they take using deadly force. you know perfectly well that is not true. i hope you are better at whatever area of law you do practice because i wouldn't want you representing me in a criminal case. not that i'm likely to need a lawyer of course. not today anyway.