in my opinion, there is no way he gets jail time for that if he surrenders when the cop rolls up to him, not a chance.
Again I agree with you. His actions that night showed he had little concern of going to jail.
in my opinion, there is no way he gets jail time for that if he surrenders when the cop rolls up to him, not a chance.
just to be clear, it is your OPINION (please provide a link or a study if otherwise) that a first time offender would get a long time (your words) in prison for the crime we see him commit on the surveillance video?
thanx for clarifying.
BBM. Indeed it was MB who put a lot of this into action. The video shows very clearly that he boldly and aggressively took what he wanted. There was no attempt to hide his identity or to steal them without the clerk knowing. Then having just committed a felony, he did not attempt to lay low and not bring attention to himself. Instead he walked down the middle of the street when the officer saw him and told them to get out of the street, which they obviously did not do. They had no intention of being cooperative.
The cop was about to go on his way when something caused him to back up and re-engage with MB again. I doubt it was because the cop suddenly decided it was time to kill an innocent law abiding citizen. At this point we know that MB had been a bold and aggressive thief who then decided to call attention to himself by walking down the middle of the street, being told to get out of the street and blatantly disregarding the cop's directive to get out of the road. Why was he being so provocative? It's like he was daring someone to challenge him.
It was MB who was apparently in an aggressive, provocative and unlawful mood. It's almost as if he were daring someone to confront him. I find his behavior very puzzling and certainly not the actions of a "gentle giant".
I am not saying he deserved what happened or any other claims. i am simply stating that he seemed to be in an bold and provocative mood based upon his behaviors just prior to the confrontation.
Johnson claims the officer grabbed Brown by his neck, and Brown tried to pull away, but the officer kept pulling Brown toward him, he said.
The officer drew his weapon, and "he said, 'I'll shoot you' or 'I'm going to shoot' " and almost instantaneously fired his weapon, hitting Brown, Johnson said.
Witness Tiffany Mitchell was picking up coworker Piaget Crenshaw for their jobs when she saw Brown and the officer "tussling through the window." Mitchell and Crenshaw said Brown appeared to be trying to pry himself from the officer's grasp. Brown had his hand on the police cruiser, trying to push himself away, Mitchell said.
in my opinion, there is no way he gets jail time for that if he surrenders when the cop rolls up to him, not a chance.
What if he had a juvenile record?
Jail time or not, if convicted for a class B felony, he would have had a felony record.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/2007/1...ar-prison-term-for-stealing-52-cent-doughnut/
FARMINGTON, Mo. – A Park Hills man..... has been charged with felony second-degree robbery after ... he slipped a 52-cent doughnut into his sweat shirt without paying ..., then pushed away a clerk who tried to stop him as he fled the store.
The push is being treated as minor assault, which transforms a misdemeanor shoplifting charge to a strong-armed robbery with a potential prison term of five to 15 years. Given Masters' criminal past, prosecutors could boost that sentence to 30 years to life.
http://www.justanswer.com/criminal-law/31qun-what-s-minimum-sentencing-strong-armed-robbery.html
(based on New Jersey laws)
"An individual arrested or indicted for robbery in the second degree (strong-armed robbery) is exposed to 5 to 10 years of jail. Any prison term imposed for robbery in NJ is also subject to the No Early Release Act ("NERA"). NERA mandates that an individual serve at least 85% of his or her prison term before they are eligible for parole."
http://www.prisontalk.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-157841.html
"my husband is up for strong armed robbery in new jersey he was sentenced to 10 years with 85%"
http://thetandd.com/news/local/man-...cle_6ab1e1b8-1a69-11e2-9d3e-0019bb2963f4.html
Rakeen Jereal Jordan White, 20, of 18 Robin Court, Williston, pleaded guilty to strong-arm robbery. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
Granted none of these is exactly what MB did, it is just a general gathering of a few quick cases that I found.
just to be clear, it is your OPINION (please provide a link or a study if otherwise) that a first time offender would get a long time (your words) in prison for the crime we see him commit on the surveillance video?
thanx for clarifying.
I just read a couple of eyewitness accounts of MB getting shot by the officer.
I find it hard to believe that the officer would try to pull Brown into the drivers seat with him. It doesn't make any sense to me.
I also find it hard to believe that a 6' 4" 292 lb man couldn't pull away from a cop grabbing him while the cop is still in his car. Why was Brown close enough to the patrol car to be able to have his hand on it while he tried to "push himself away"?
These eyewitness accounts seem a bit off to me. JMO.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/14/us/ferguson-michael-brown-shooting-5-things/index.html
sure, if he were charged with a felony which is unlikely.
Based on what?
Family lawyer on msnbc= they have prelim autopsy but will not release it because it is not official.. When they have the official autopsy results all the lawyers, crump etc, will get together and decide when and how to release the results.
Say what?
sure, if he were charged with a felony which is unlikely.
BBM. Indeed it was MB who put a lot of this into action. The video shows very clearly that he boldly and aggressively took what he wanted. There was no attempt to hide his identity or to steal them without the clerk knowing. Then having just committed a felony, he did not attempt to lay low and not bring attention to himself. Instead he walked down the middle of the street when the officer saw him and told them to get out of the street, which they obviously did not do. They had no intention of being cooperative.
The cop was about to go on his way when something caused him to back up and re-engage with MB again. I doubt it was because the cop suddenly decided it was time to kill an innocent law abiding citizen. At this point we know that MB had been a bold and aggressive thief who then decided to call attention to himself by walking down the middle of the street, being told to get out of the street and blatantly disregarding the cop's directive to get out of the road. Why was he being so provocative? It's like he was daring someone to challenge him.
It was MB who was apparently in an aggressive, provocative and unlawful mood. It's almost as if he were daring someone to confront him. I find his behavior very puzzling and certainly not the actions of a "gentle giant".
I am not saying he deserved what happened or any other claims. i am simply stating that he seemed to be in an bold and provocative mood based upon his behaviors just prior to the confrontation.
he did pull away from him, no witness account or even the officers account that we have heard so far claims otherwise.
Johnson claims the officer grabbed Brown by his neck, and Brown tried to pull away, but the officer kept pulling Brown toward him, he said.
The officer drew his weapon, and "he said, 'I'll shoot you' or 'I'm going to shoot' " and almost instantaneously fired his weapon, hitting Brown, Johnson said.
Witness Tiffany Mitchell was picking up coworker Piaget Crenshaw for their jobs when she saw Brown and the officer "tussling through the window." Mitchell and Crenshaw said Brown appeared to be trying to pry himself from the officer's grasp. Brown had his hand on the police cruiser, trying to push himself away, Mitchell said.
sure, if he were charged with a felony which is unlikely.
common sense, experience, or my opinion. take your pick.
thanx for sharing your thoughts!
Link to support the above statement of yours please.
many have been posted that prove the contrary.