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等 级:居民 |
经 验 值:13 |
魅 力 值:17 |
龙 币:14 |
积 分:17.9 |
注册日期:2010-12-24 |
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美国的警察就是牛
大体经过:
一木雕艺人,边走路边刻木雕。被西雅图的一警察发现,警察从背后朝他
喊"Hey. Hey. Hey. Put the knife down. Put the knife down. Put the knife
down."(把刀放下,把刀放下,把刀放下)(咱们可以想象一下刻木头那刀的大
小),整段话不超过7秒,然后果断连开五枪秒杀之,理由是,那木雕哥们拿到转
身对着他(你TM叫人家的,后经证实,这木雕哥们一个耳朵是聋的。。)。现在
这米国警察被停职(没收枪支和警牌)。。。。这事件发生在2010年8月30号,枪
杀视频刚被公布,目前,这位神勇警察依然很逍遥~~,民主国家的警察就是不
一般。。中国警察神马的都是浮云~~~
视频/新闻原址:该网址不再展示
-cam-video-and-audio-of-Seattle-police-officer-involved-shooting-
112105254.html
You can’’t see the shooting in the video, but you can hear it.(视频对话)
Seattle Police Officer Ian Birk’’s dashboard camera shows
woodcarver John T. Williams apparently carving on a piece of wood as he
walks in front of the patrol car. He’’s looking down and appears to
be minding his own busine
Birk, a two-year veteran officer, follows Williams and yells.
"Hey. Hey. Hey. Put the knife down. Put the knife down. Put the
knife down."
Then, five gunshots are heard in rapid succession.
From the time Birk makes initial contact by yelling "Hey," seven
seconds passes before he fires.
Williams’’ friends say he likely did not hear Birk yelling.
"He was deaf in one ear, so he probably didn’’t understand what
the officer was saying," said Lila Lewis.
Shortly after the shooting, you hear a female witness yell to Birk,
"He didn’’t do anything."
Birk responds, "Ma’’am, he had a knife and he wouldn’’t drop
it."
Birk’’s attorney says Williams was a threat.
"He was walking around downtown Seattle. He was inebriated and he
had an open knife in his hand," said attorney Ted Buck.
After the shooting, Birk tells another officer, "He had the knife
open. I asked him to drop it multiple times. He turned towards me."
An inquest will decide if Birk acted too hastily. A preliminary
police finding was that the shooting was not justified. Birk has been
stripped of his gun and badge.
A judge ruled Thursday that the video should be made public. Buck
argued that allowing the release of the video now could taint the
memory of witnesses and their accounts of what they saw.
KING Television and The Seattle Times made asked for the release of
the video through a Public Disclosure Request. They argued in court
that releasing the video is essential to ensuring that the inquest
process is transparent.
Williams’’ family also asked that the video be released at this
time. They pointed out that videotapes of some of Williams previous
encounters with the police have already been released and show him in a
negative light.
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