It seems that at least some of the University of Cincinnati police officers believe that good community policing in the area out and about and around the University, consists of cruising the streets in their dark-tinted windows-up patrol vehicles, and using their license plate readers to forage for stolen cars and other possible unpaid fine scofflaws. (All in addition of course to using it to find a car registered to a female being driven by a male but not reported stolen and killing said male who was driving without a front plate attached to his girlfriend's car.)
There is nothing about those kind of policing techniques that lead me me to believe that at least some of the University Police give a hoot about the community. I think they view them as the scourge of society and using their LPRs and their Sig Sauers they are going to single handedly wipe them off the planet earth.
I posted an article last night that was about other recent arrests that ex-officer Tensing was involved in. It's a good read.
I know that situation happens, however if one lives responsibly, the odds of being shot by LE are drastically reduced. More often, the times when I think "it could have been me" is when an innocent person is killed by a reckless driver who's been ticketed/license suspended numerous times. Life is dangerous. It's smart to minimize risk if one hopes to live a long time. Following the law as best I can and knowing how to handle a traffic stop is one way of minimizing that danger.
BBM
Chuckles - I live life responsibly. I need to duck if I enter the US? Not a good tourism advertisement imo. I know people planning to head to TN in a few days - will see if I can talk them out of it.
If he knew, what was the point of badgering him? JMO
Which is exactly the point I was trying to make in the beginning. White people don't think "It could have been me" instead they think "That could never happen to me." Black people always know "It could have been me." Even when I asked you quite directly you still tried to make sure I understood you weren't going to say it could happen to you. Not if you live responsibly. I wasn't asking you about anything else. There was no need for the qualifiers.
JMO.
BBM: I think I'm allowed to make more broad responses than just "yes" or "no'. It is my belief that personal responsibility is paramount in all aspects of life. I'm more worried about being struck by lightning or contracting Ebola than being shot by LE. So, without adding any qualifiers, it is my belief that I will never be shot by LE.
At the time, Tensing was applying for law enforcement jobs and he’d participated in the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office explorer program.
Rabanus said she told the head of the explorer program “that he shouldn’t recommend Mr. Tensing for any type of police employment because…he’s a ticking time bomb.”
After Tensing killed DuBose, Rabanus said she “just kind of shook (her) head.”
“It’s like what I had feared – my impression of him in fearing that he shouldn’t be a police officer back then, and hoping that he wasn’t hired...had come to fruition.”
“CINCINNATI – Sam DuBose had four bags and one jar of marijuana in his car when he was shot and killed by former University of Cincinnati officer Ray Tensing, according to a search warrant affidavit.”
After being beaten in 2010 fight, Ray Tensing seemed like a 'ticking time bomb,' attorney says
WCPO 9 Cincinnati ABC
Tom McKee, James Leggate
5:28 PM, Aug 5, 2015
CINCINNATI – After a fight in 2010, Ray Tensing seemed like “a ticking time bomb,” a defense attorney said.
Tensing, the former University of Cincinnati police officer charged with murder, had been involved in a fight after a party in August of that year. It was just a few weeks after completing his training from the police academy, where he was recognized as an “outstanding student” during the graduation ceremony.
Some words were exchanged about someone’s girlfriend, according to Jay Clark, an attorney who represented one of the men involved. Tensing jumped out of a pickup truck he was in and the fight escalated.
Again we have the attorney who represented RT's attackers trying to piggy-back off this case for free publicity.
Clark characterizes RT as a "ticking time-bomb" because of some intemperate text msgs RT sent to his friends AFTER he was attacked. I think most of us would be making comments like "I'm going to get them if the cops don't" if we had been beaten to a pulp. As for the vague accusation of witness tampering did any of his friends even witness the fight? I very much doubt it - if they had they would have come to his defense and of course they cannot be witnesses after the fact based on what he told them because this would be inadmissible hearsay testimony so I think this is just another smear of RT by defense lawyer Clark.
What is troubling to me is how RT's defense attorney is not fighting back and is instead offering "no comment". He should be punching back twice as hard against these smears especially since the facts are on his clients side. From what I have seen of RT's attorney I have not been very impressed so far.
UC police officers on administrative leave have positive reviews, personnel files show
WCPO 9 Cincinnati
By Brian Mains
2:18 PM, Aug 3, 2015
3:05 PM, Aug 3, 2015
“CINCINNATI — The two University of Cincinnati police officers placed on administrative leave after the fatal shooting of Samuel DuBose by former fellow officer Ray Tensing have consistently received positive on-the-job reviews from their superiors, records show.
The university released the personnel files for UC officer Phillip Kidd and UC officer-in-training David Lindenschmidt in response to an open records request made by WCPO.”
More ...
http://www.wcpo.com/news/local-news...ve-have-positive-reviews-personnel-files-show
On Friday, a Hamilton County grand jury chose not to indict the two officers who responded to a call for assistance from Tensing on July 19 after Tensing shot DuBose, 43, once in the head during a traffic stop.
It was Lisa Rabanus who referred to him as a "ticking time bomb."
Rabanus said she told the head of the explorer program “that he shouldn’t recommend Mr. Tensing for any type of police employment because…he’s a ticking time bomb.”