everybodhi
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Why do you think the police might end up pulling their weapons ? Have you seen the crimes stats in the inner cities?
It is hard to put all of the blame on the police officers when they are surrounded by hundreds of violent gang members , most of them armed.
Here are some crime stats for Minneapolis, last year:
http://www.startribune.com/statistics-show-minneapolis-violent-crime-edged-up-in-2016/409711555/
The city recorded 2,274 aggravated assaults — a crime category that includes shootings and is considered a key measure of how safe a city is — up from 2,051 the previous year. The number of homicides fell from 50 to 37 during the same period. Robberies also declined, but rapes and sexual assaults jumped more than 6 percent.
Meanwhile, arrests are down for every crime category except automobile thefts. Police made 8,963 fewer arrests in 2016 for crimes from homicide to arson, despite the rise in overall crime.
Observers speculate that the decline was caused by everything from the department’s embrace of a community policing model that emphasized public relations over cracking down to an apparent monthslong work slowdown in response to intense public criticism after the November 2015 shooting death of Jamar Clark during a struggle with two officers.
Police statistics show that of 340 people shot in Minneapolis through last week, 215 were on the city’s North Side. In 2015, there were 260 shooting victims citywide."
So 340 people shot in Minneapolis in ONE week----and we wonder why the cops might be quick to pull out their weapons when they are in a dark alley?[/QUOTE
Well, you can post all those stats, but Justine was not in a dark alley and she was not in a high crime area and most importantly she was not carrying a weapon.
Crime stats aren't police risk stats, in reality there are many riskier jobs than being a cop but it's the only job where one can shoot someone for being "scary" and have essential immunity behind a thin blue line.