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by Alupis
1355 days ago
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> the prosecution simply has to prove that the officer in question was thinking the wrong thoughts when he pulled the trigger. Close, but not quite. It's not about what the person was thinking, it's about what a "reasonable person" would think given the same situation. For what it's worth, this is how it works for civilians too. The only burden is to convince a jury a reasonable person would also believe there was a threat given the same situation. Reasonable meaning having the same information as the people involved, ie. without the benefit of hindsight or later discovered facts. |
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Then why are the seven LAPD officers that shot at the pickup truck during their manhunt for Dorner not serving ten-to-twenty?
Because if me and six of my closest friends shot up a random, non-threatening truck with two women in it, there's not a jury in the world who wouldn't convict us, and there's not a prosecutor in the world who would decline to press charges.
They are only held to the same standards as the rest of us in theory. In practice, the bar is so low, it's practically nonexistant.