307
this post was submitted on 02 Apr 2024
307 points (97.8% liked)
New York Times gift articles
542 readers
20 users here now
Share your New York Times gift articles links here.
Rules:
- Only post New York Times gift article links.
Info:
- The NYT Open Team. (2021-06-23). “A New Way to Share New York Times Stories”. open.nytimes.com.
- “Gift Articles for New York Times Subscribers”. (n.d.). help.nytimes.com.
Tip:
- Google "unlocked_article_code" and limit search results to the past week.
- Mastodon: Use control-F or ⌘-F to search this page. (ref)
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
still have yet to see any evidence this is true. doesn't look like it from the video.
Quite literally in the article:
"Savannah was wearing tactical gear and a helmet as she walked toward a deputy, the Sheriff’s Department said."
Maybe the father was using her as a decoy.
Cop statements aren't evidence, they are cop statements. Should I link all the cases (Let's start with Walter Scott) where what cops said was true wasn't?
Of course, you can't trust everyone. There were like 50 people there, including EMTs who could vouch. The video we saw was highly compressed and censored, so it's hard to see what she was wearing "at ground level".
That said, this happened nearly two years ago. Original reports stated that she was wearing BODY ARMOR, and may have been a “participant” in shooting at the officers during the pursuit.
I'm not going to investigate this. It was tragic, and I hope justice is served to whomever it needs to be.
...but you're pretty sure whomever that is, it's not the cops.
I hope when you eventually realize police aren't to be trusted it's not that you dug in your heels all the way until you had a tragic encounter with them that actually affected you. That seems to be the threshold for a great many folks, and it's a huge contributor to the slow progression of police reform.
Good day to you.
Hmm, no. Obviously, they admit to shooting her.
The question is, was it an accident? Negligence? or premeditated? Consequences should follow once that's been determined.
In the context of a shootout with someone in the vehicle she came from (initially reported as possibly her), and with either mistaken identity or reason to believe she may have been armed, it's going to be hard to say that they intentionally caused her death.