• mozz@mbin.grits.dev
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    2 months ago

    See this is why I don’t like ACAB. Once you start taking this cartoonish version of any given type of people, you start looking at things in this really skewed perspective. People could be good or bad or a mix of both or whatever, sure, but once they’re “the enemy” and everything they do is stupid and evil and wrong, the kinds of things you start thinking are plausible start to become off kilter.

    I think there is about a 0% chance that the cop just didn’t say a word and ran up to the car with his gun out and started trying to break in like a crazy person, and that was the first thing that happened. Maybe it’s 100% true that the cops miscommunicated and one guy had told Scheffler to go, and another then told him to stop, or something like that, but I’m still real curious about this blank space between “He was proceeding as directed by another traffic officer” and then there being a cop attached to the outside of the car and Scheffler still moving the car forward and it being a “chaotic scene.”

    I mean, he stopped after 30 feet, instead of continuing on his merry way through their accident scene or whatever. Sounds like if what happened was the cop grabbing the car and not letting go, then his strategy worked. My bet would be that the bodycam video will show some other less chaotic things they tried to do to get him to stop, as a first step, and the majority of the chaos stemming directly from Scheffler’s actions. IDK, maybe not and maybe it’s silly to talk about what the video will show before seeing it, but that is my feeling.

    • _number8_@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      2 months ago

      but if a guy’s just driving on a road he isn’t supposed to be on, is trying to break into the car really part of the protocol on that? surely at least drive after him or just radio the plate or something, it’s just a event security for a golf tournament, it’s not the president speaking

      • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        4
        ·
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        Part of the point is that they were working a fatal accident. There could have been medical people walking around in unexpected places, or still a body in the road he could run over, or who knows what. If he was driving towards the road that was closed for that reason, then absolutely yes; physically stopping the car if the guy isn’t responding to verbally stopping the car is part of the cop’s job, not just letting him go and good luck to anyone walking around in the accident scene. (I don’t really know, so maybe it wasn’t that, but also as far as I know maybe it was.)

        It’s actually really common that cops have trouble getting people to understand that there’s some urgent physical reality that overrides their “but my house is right there” or “but I have to get to work” or “I’m too important to have to stop” argument that in their mind is way more important, and so they need to be able to drive right through the place with the gun battle or the dead body or the downed electrical wires, or whatever.