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It's not looking good for the Texas vigilante killing.


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2020 May 10, 8:58pm   7,297 views  243 comments

by Tenpoundbass   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

Everything about this story has been wrong, from the guys jumping in their truck and actually getting out and holding the suspect at gun point.
There's not a stand your ground law in the US that will back you, if things get out of hand at that point. In almost every scenario, you'll be the aggressor.

Why did Ahmaud Arbery, grab their gun, the video would have cleared him and he could have sued them later.

It's been rumored he was in boots, and was carrying a hammer, though it's clear he wasn't doing either. The video, shows Ahmaud enter the under construction property. But IMHO, it doesn't look like he's casing the place. Now they don't show the whole video, he could have looked innocent until the video stops. Then he could have been snooping and prowling looking for tools, and scoping out any copper wire. Speculation of course, but why release the video and not show the entire three minutes. What was he doing when he noticed the neighbor across the street calling 9-11 before he bolted out the door?

If he was doing nothing more than what it looked like, it could be argued he was stopping by looking for work. That's how I used to get construction work way way on back in the day. Just show up on the job, and ask if they need help.

It's not looking good for the Good Ole Boys, what's in the rest of the video, and why is Ahmaud so brazen to try to take the gun, rather than the prospect of waiting for the police?

Especially given the lack of will to prosecute these days by Liberal judges, Mayors and DA's.


www.youtube.com/embed/rg8CaecNJI8

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132   WookieMan   2020 May 23, 9:29am  

WineHorror1 says
Georgia law shows they did nothing wrong.

That's really all that matters. Feelings and what is legal/illegal in other states not named Georgia is a moot point. I don't like what they did, but if it didn't break a law, who cares? Oh wait, he was black.....
133   Automan Empire   2020 May 23, 10:03am  

Tueller Drills are a firearm training exercise to see how close an enemy can be before he can run up and disarm you faster than you can draw and fire on him. Average is around 25 feet I understand.

When your starting conditions are being IN A TRUCK following the adversary who is on foot unarmed and you end up with him taking control of your gun, that is an EXTREME level of Tueller Drill and firearm control FAIL!
134   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 May 23, 10:05am  

Automan Empire says

When your starting conditions are being IN A TRUCK following the adversary who is on foot unarmed and you end up with him taking control of your gun, that is an EXTREME level of Tueller Drill and firearm control FAIL!


It also shows they weren't redneck vigilantes out for a lynching.
135   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 23, 10:09am  

WineHorror1 says
I hope the jury does not see it the same way as you.


Well if more thought like me, then the Democrats wouldn't be able to call for "Sensible Gun Laws"(really a gun grab).

If we weren't so quick to defend everyone that goes home to retrieve a gun to return to settle arguments.

If you have to get a gun and chase someone down, you're doing gun ownership wrong period.

The guy was not in the shape to feed Auhmud the but of his shot gun and take a few souvenir teeth with him. Then they had no business getting out of the truck.
Yes Auhmud brought it upon himself. And I'm sure if the case isn't politicized and if we don't let the Liberals make a Race issue out of it. I'm sure a jury will the whole episode for what it was.

He would be cleared of Murder, or Man Slaughter, it would be proved that in the end it was self defense. But at the least they would get two years for unlawful discharge of a firearm.

We've got to be smarter and beat the Liberals back by staying ahead of their bullshit, and race smearing politics.

If the 2A consensus is "Well the darkie got what he deserved, look at his past record, those good ole boys dindu nuffin!"

I say this every time one of these grey area shootings come up. And I'm always right, the 2A folks allows it to become all about race, and if they keep it up.

We're going to end up with Chuck and Nancy's "Sensible Gun Laws"(which really means no guns at all).
136   GNL   2020 May 23, 10:46am  

Tenpoundbass says
If the 2A consensus is "Well the darkie got what he deserved, look at his past record, those good ole boys dindu nuffin!"

Ok, let's play a game.

The white guys are black, Ahmad is black (still) and the location is Cabrini-Green. I'd bet a high percentage of people who are crying about this situation would have a different view of my comparison event.

You?

Me: I'd be praising the black guys trying to "law-and-order" Cabrini-Green.
137   PeopleUnited   2020 May 23, 11:04am  

Tenpoundbass says
If you have to get a gun and chase someone down, you're doing gun ownership wrong period.


Roosevelt enacted this same strategy and was later elected president. https://rtpr.com/9-amazing-facts-about-teddy-roosevelt/you-don’t-steal-boat-theodore-roosevelt

“1886, Roosevelt and two friends purchased a “clinker” boat to carry them across the frozen Missouri River. After coming back from a hunting expedition, they found the rope that was securing the boat had been cut and the boat itself was missing. This is probably when most people would notify the authorities…most people. However, Theodore didn’t take too kindly to the act of thievery, so he and his friends built a boat from scratch (in 3 days), tested its durability, and then set off to find the guilty culprits and retrieve their boat. After a few days of navigating the river, at times reaching 0 degrees Fahrenheit, they found the three thieves. What did they do? Well, Roosevelt and his buddies roughed-up and captured the men, and brought them back with them to be arrested. During the long trip back, apparently Roosevelt passed the time reading Dostoevsky’s Anna Karenina to his friends and captives. When they got back to dry land, Roosevelt arrested the three men himself because he was the Deputy Sheriff. The boys got off lucky since Roosevelt only arrested them, because the normal punishment back in those days was death by hanging.”

If the departed was not a violent offender who attacked an armed man willing to defend himseld, he would still be alive and probably would even be a free man.
138   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 23, 6:21pm  

PeopleUnited says
If the departed was not a violent offender who attacked an armed man willing to defend himseld, he would still be alive and probably would even be a free man.


He didn't end up botching the arrest and killing the suspect.

If you're not a bad ass, don't go playing Dog the Bounty Hunter, because you will probably lack the experience to keep control of the situation at all times.
The guy was thrown out of the Police force because he didn't master tactics and procedures. He should have acted like the thousands of other people who have chased suspicious characters like that in their car. Unarmed, and they stay in their car, while they talk to 911. Sure have a gun in the console if the guy pulls a gun out of his waist band, then it's on.

At least thee times in my life, I have been approached by people who was sure I was a culprit. One was Seminole Reservation cop, pulled me over and was convinced I was the guy that drove by earlier and flipped him the bird. And a couple other instances I wont go into. Of course I wasn't the guy and it was all resolved. But I was never confronted by guys chasing me down in a pick up truck, jumping out with a shot gun aimed at me. They always called the cops and then they and the cops came out. The cop always was able to verify I was not the person they were looking for, and everyone lived happily ever after.
139   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 23, 6:31pm  

WineHorror1 says
The white guys are black, Ahmad is black (still) and the location is Cabrini-Green. I'd bet a high percentage of people who are crying about this situation would have a different view of my comparison event.


This isn't a white and black thing, and I'm not calling for gun control, I'm not saying it was a malicious slaying, but they put themselves on the position to do what happens way too often. I think if people know, "Well wait a minute, if I go barging in there with my gun and it doesn't turn out like the cool Texas Walker Ranger idea I have in my head, and someone gets killed. I might go to jail for a couple years at the very least. "
These things would stop happening. And the Left would quit getting their damn racial fodder, Idiots like these three Fuck Sticks keep feeding the Goddamn commie propaganda machine, and I'm sick of it. It's an endless negative feedback loop, of Stupid, unlawful discharges of firearms, at the very least, and then Liberals saying all white people are white supremacist and they need to take all of our guns.

I don't want to play the stupid game, and tired of this Pro 2A and the Commie Resonate response.

Would it kill pro gun people to admit, people should go to jail when they fucked up?

You accidentally pull a trigger and some random person gets shot, used to be called manslaughter. Today 90% of the time with a good lawyer and $100,000 you'll beat it in court as an accident.
But if you randomly tossed a hammer up in the sky in a crowded street, and it struck and killed someone. It would be some degree of murder.
What makes lawful gun owners impervious to any consequences for their bad decisions when things don't go as plan and they kill someone?

The gun is there for your protection, and to keep the Commie Cannibal Anarchy at bay if that day comes. It's not a beer opener, back scratcher or something you retrieve to settle an argument.
140   PeopleUnited   2020 May 23, 7:04pm  

Tenpoundbass says
He didn't end up botching the arrest and killing the suspect.


Because the suspects Roosevelt encountered had enough respect and/or sense to know when to wave the white flag. The departed lacked that sense/respect which is why he is departed. He chose to attack. He could have been reasonable and sat down while waiting for the police to arrive. He chose violence instead. He chose his own fate.
141   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 23, 7:56pm  

OK I got one more for you. If you pull a gun on someone for any reason, and it turns out you were wrong for holding the suspect with a gun, then you should be sued for and arrested. Now that's under the best circumstance nobody died. Now add someone does die.

Look we can't have a society where half the people think they can run around with their gun doing the police's job, on non Emergency situations.

I would rather see legislation on hard rules where the use of a weapon is lawful, and when it isn't.
I think if you chase someone down, In a non emergency situation, where no serious or violent crime was committed, and hold them at bay with a gun.
If you go retrieve a gun and return to a location, it's unlawful in my opinion, if there is no serious threat to warrant such action.
Sure chasing down someone that just murdered someone, assaulted or rapped is one thing. But chasing down suspicious black, brown, or white people and holding them at bay with a gun. Is a big fucking No No! Call the police and coordinate with them, don't go ahead on, and play Deputy Barney Fifh.
I defend you right to defend yourself, and your home with your gun, and your right to have that gun for that reason alone.

It ends, when you go looking for a fight. No matter how noble or right you think it may be. There's a reason people flunk out of the police academy. And time and time again, it's these people that end up doing this shit. Quit defending them, they are going to cost everyone our Gun Rights.
142   CBOEtrader   2020 May 23, 8:15pm  

Tenpoundbass says
I would rather see legislation on hard rules where the use of a weapon is lawful, and when it isn't.


Thats exactly what citizens arrest laws do. Personal knowledge of a felony is the line in Georgia.

I expect this courtcase to argue whether these two had that personal knowledge and if Arbery's behavior constitutes felonious behavior.
143   PeopleUnited   2020 May 23, 8:40pm  

Tenpoundbass says
I would rather see legislation on hard rules where the use of a weapon is lawful, and when it isn't.

In other words, voicing support for “common sense gun laws.” Guess we know the truth now.

Tenpoundbass says
Quit defending them,

Will quit defending them when someone can tell me what law they broke! Till then I will ask anyone who loves liberty to quit blaming the victims for being attacked!!
144   AD   2020 May 23, 9:05pm  

NoCoupForYou says

It's not a case of McMichaels walking up to Arbery and pointing a firearm directly at him.

Also, no lib has explained why good boy Arbery has a prior gun conviction.


You would have to evaluate the circumstance as far as was the shooter in fear of his life. Think of our favorite neighborhood security watchman George Zimmerman. He was tackled and in a fight when the gun went off. Zimmerman did not shoot Trayvon Martin when Trayvon was running away.

That is what needs to be evaluated as far as whether a legal gun owner committed murder or not. Did they shoot Arbery in the back ? And how many times ?
145   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 May 23, 9:09pm  

ad says
That is what needs to be evaluated as far as whether a legal gun owner committed murder or not. Did they shoot Arbery in the back ? And how many times ?


Exactly. Fortunately, we have the video, which shows Arbery running at the truck, then around it, and then quickly pivoting left to attack younger McMichaels, delivering a few hooks and trying to grab the shotgun.

Other than asking him to stop and stopping the truck in front of him, the McMichaels did not run down and pursue Arbery further, nor did the shoot him from inside a vehicle or other situation where it was unnecessary and overly aggressive. In the beginning of the video, when Arbery begins charging, the shotgun is not being pointed at McMichaels.

Under Georgia law, the McMichaels were correct in conducting a citizen's arrest, and, quite aside from that, justified in self defense for shooting him. I believe on past precedence, trying to grab somebody's legal firearm, always constitutes justified self-defense.
146   astronut97   2020 May 24, 4:49am  

If armed men in two pickup trucks started following you on a neighborhood street and tried to block your path multiple times what would you do, honestly?! In the video just before shooting occurred, Arbery is penned in with Roddie's (the one shooting the video) truck behind him and the McMichaels truck ahead of him and then the younger McMichaels jumps out of the driver's seat brandishing a shotgun. Also, I think it has to be a felony for a citizens arrest to be legally allowed in Georgia and merely walking onto someone's unsecured property isn't a felony, so that alone would make the McMichaels actions illegal.
147   PeopleUnited   2020 May 24, 5:09am  

If a jury, after hearing ALL of the facts, finds that the McMichaels had a reasonable and probable suspicion of burglary, or any felony, then the citizens' arrest was valid. But to say there is ZERO evidence of burglary, is simply not true. Simply running from the police is sufficient to justify a law enforcement detention. In this case, it is clear that when he was confronted by a neighbor, the departed ran out of the house and down the street. That is evidence, but not proof of wrongdoing.
148   GNL   2020 May 24, 6:19am  

Some people are quick to convict white people even with video evidence. Btw, what exactly is a citizens arrest supposed to look like? I didn't get my manual.
149   WookieMan   2020 May 24, 7:09am  

astronut97 says
merely walking onto someone's unsecured property isn't a felony

He could have committed a felony when inside the home. The attitude that it's fine to just walk into a home under construction is still mind blowing to me. There are arsonist out there, people that just like breaking shit or say flooding the basement by turning the water on and letting it fuck things up.

I assisted/worked with builders in Chicago for 13 years. This owner/builder is a unicorn by saying he didn't care Arbery was in the property. His stance is likely a lie as he doesn't want to get sued because a black man was shot after entering his property. He's likely the one that told neighbors to keep an eye on the place. He doesn't want to be associated with Arbery's death at all and become an accessory to murder (there wasn't in this case), so he's lying.

So yes they legally confronted Arbery after he illegally entered a home. Yes, it's perfectly legal to believe a crime was committed. Yes the use of a vehicle was aggressive. Yes they had guns legally drawn. Yes he attacked them. Yes he died. Nothing would have happened at all if Arbery didn't enter the home. And sure, it feels a little like the wild west, but it got that way because people would try to take and harm others in that time. So if you wanted any semblance of a decent society, you sometimes had to take measure to deal with idiots.

These guys just wanted to stop Arbery, it's very clear there was no intent to kill. All he had to do was stop and explain. Having had a gun pointed at me when I was younger, I just complied..... and now I'm here today to annoy you all ;)
150   RWSGFY   2020 May 24, 8:50am  

astronut97 says
If armed men in two pickup trucks started following you on a neighborhood street and tried to block your path multiple times what would you do, honestly?!
.

Depends. If you are absolutely set on not stopping and talking to them, go by what they are armed with: if they have only pistols or shotguns - distance is your friend, so it makes sense to run away, prefferably in the direction their pickup can't follow. If they have rifles you won't be able to gain enough distance on foot even if your name is Usain Bolt.
151   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 May 24, 8:52am  

WookieMan says
He could have committed a felony when inside the home. The attitude that it's fine to just walk into a home under construction is still mind blowing to me. There are arsonist out there, people that just like breaking shit or say flooding the basement by turning the water on and letting it fuck things up.


Yep - I find this attitude unbelievable, never encountered it. Maybe it's a West of the Rockies thing?
152   CBOEtrader   2020 May 24, 9:16am  

astronut97 says
Also, I think it has to be a felony for a citizens arrest to be legally allowed in Georgia and merely walking onto someone's unsecured property isn't a felony, so that alone would make the McMichaels actions illegal


Assuming this will be the core of the case
153   CBOEtrader   2020 May 24, 9:18am  

WookieMan says
astronut97 says
merely walking onto someone's unsecured property isn't a felony

He could have committed a felony when inside the home. The attitude that it's fine to just walk into a home under construction is still mind blowing to me.


Its not fine. BUT, as mentioned, citizens arrest requires knowledge of a felony.

Did Mcmichaels have knowledge of a felony or just suspect of possible felony intent? The court will determine judgement, most likely, based on that interpretation.
154   astronut97   2020 May 24, 10:09am  

covid_shmovid says
astronut97 says
If armed men in two pickup trucks started following you on a neighborhood street and tried to block your path multiple times what would you do, honestly?!
.

Depends. If you are absolutely set on not stopping and talking to them, go by what they are armed with: if they have only pistols or shotguns - distance is your friend, so it makes sense to run away, prefferably in the direction their pickup can't follow. If they have rifles you won't be able to gain enough distance on foot even if your name is Usain Bolt.


Where was he supposed to go? He tried to avoid them multiple times and this time he was boxed in between two pickup trucks and the driver in front having jumped out with a shotgun. Really what is wrong with all you guys here that think this is reasonable behavior and response to someone having been seen entering a house under construction for a couple of minutes? Holding a person against their will is considered kidnapping.

I'm from upstate New York and Michigan and currently in Orlando and I still walk into houses under construction. It's not a big deal.
155   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 24, 12:30pm  

PeopleUnited says
In other words, voicing support for “common sense gun laws.” Guess we know the truth now.


Now I argue no position on saying who or who can't own a gun. I'm saying if you're going to own a gun, there should be laws that protect, or makes the case for or against the result of the commission of that gun.

Here's the thing, you own a gun right? I don't see you jumping in your truck and doing what this guy did. Or maybe you're LEO, or SecOps mil, and you would. And if you would, what would you have done differently? Do you see everything this guy did, as a perfect execution, do you not see anything about what he did, that makes him liable for what happened? It wasn't cold blooded murder, but it was incompetent on in the executions of his actions. If you say you would have done everything this guy did, then you're as big of an idiot as Father and son are.

But if you're a sensible reasonable person, and you're being honest with yourself. You know you at most you would followed him in your car from a safe distance, that's if you felt like you needed to give chase. And you would have coordinated with the police keeping the 911 dispatch updated on the suspects location. You would have done the sensible thing, because you're not a police academy reject, wanna be.

Go back and look at these cases historically for the last 20 years or more. it's always some unhinged guy that had LEO aspirations, but was rejected by them. They want to be tough guy local Justice hero. I defend their right to own a gun, I don't defend their actions on being rogue vigilante dispatchers of Justice, what happens when they get it wrong. If they roll up on me, and I have no idea who in the hell they are, or why they are coming at me with a gun, I might take those two fat over weight Barney Fifes out before they know what hits them. They are a menace to themselves and everyone else around them. And it can't be allowed with impunity from the pro 2A people.

You wouldn't have done this and neither would I. There was absolutely nothing heroic about it, and the Auhmud had no legal obligation to recognize two Fat white guys chasing him down the road in a pick up truck, with their otherwise, beautiful perfectly legal guns.
156   WookieMan   2020 May 24, 1:19pm  

CBOEtrader says
WookieMan says
astronut97 says
merely walking onto someone's unsecured property isn't a felony

He could have committed a felony when inside the home. The attitude that it's fine to just walk into a home under construction is still mind blowing to me.


Its not fine. BUT, as mentioned, citizens arrest requires knowledge of a felony.

Did Mcmichaels have knowledge of a felony or just suspect of possible felony intent? The court will determine judgement, most likely, based on that interpretation.

I get both sides of this, but at what point was there guilt beyond a reasonable doubt in this situation? I'm just preparing for these guys to get off. I don't think it was right what they did, but there hasn't been evidence or a fact that makes them guilty from what I've seen of anything. Whether anyone likes it or not, I've yet to see evidence of a violation of law in that specific case.
157   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 May 24, 1:44pm  

jazz_music says
These mass shootings seem to be rooted in people suffering from depression. Some of them are these approximately 18 year olds drenched in testosterone that see their prospects are awful after graduating high school. The FBI has studies on this, you can find them on the web, and it looks like the FBI knows exactly why these horrible things keep on happening over and over, it's oppressive poverty and loss, Then there are these internally tortured closeted or latent homosexuals. ALSO we wage so many wars we wind up with a lot of military-trained Americans amongst us and they have their PTSD, and 1 out of every 5 homeless is a veteran. I'm describing America the powder keg. With the wholesale betrayal of our vets I'm surprised we don't get more bombings. Maybe the popularity of weed mitigates that phenomenon.


A huge one is schizophrenic and schizoid personalities (aspects of schizophrenia without the full spectrum and low severity).

Remember that the Broward School Shooter had dozens of interactions with school and police authorities over the course of a year or so, but could only be forcibly hospitalized for a 72 hour period. He called police begging to be hospitalized, he was refused. It was known he had mental issues.

The obstacle is the ACLU and Leftist Groups that ended forcible hospitalization. It went from almost no real evidence needed, to all but impossible UNTIL a violent crime committed.

The dirty truth is that not all the autists and mentally ill can be mainstreamed into society, despite how good it makes their relatives or blank slate theorists feel.

That elementary school shooter in Connecticut, some issue. Mother in denial that he could not be mainlined, needed to be in a home. Same with VA Shooter.
158   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 24, 2:06pm  

jazz_music says
What you say sounds rational, but it omits the problem that (I think) half or more of America is taking SSRI drugs and other anti-depressants which can result in some really bad side effects that seem to be at the root of a long history of civil disturbances including suicide and murder.

These mass shootings seem to be rooted in people suffering from depression


You can't conflate out rights to bare arms with mentally unstable people. Look in India, there's countless cases of people working in Food Catering services, poisoning a whole Wedding party over politics, religion or family feud squabbles.

China has people attacking schools with machetes. Stopping law abiding citizens from being protected from these lunatics in their own home, from these people. Is against my rights to bare arms to protect my home.
159   krc   2020 May 24, 2:35pm  

Are you sure of the law? If there is no fence or other restrictions that block access, it is perfectly legal for folks to cross the property and even enter a building under construction. Doesn't matter what the owner thinks. I wouldn't do it, but that is why we have fences. I don't know if he had to open a door or as this was a construction site everything was open. In fact, if there was no fence or obstacle he had a perfect right to be there (he was not obstructing work, making threats, etc...). Under the law (CA) I believe there are two components: you must deprive the owner of use of the property AND the use was for a substantial period of time. Don't know about tx.

Even breaking and entering is "iffy" - did he actually take something or not? If you break down a door (or even just push a door) to get access but no intent to steal, in CA you would be charged with simple trespassing (non-felony). It gets even more complicated depending on the circumstance. There are lots of cases where even for breaking and entering where nothing is stolen even trespassing cannot be charged (person who entered had been invited over previously, location is a public attractant/nuisance, etc...).

Confronting a person with a gun outside your castle instead of just calling police and tailing the suspect was a mistake.

WookieMan says
astronut97 says
merely walking onto someone's unsecured property isn't a felony

He could have committed a felony when inside the home. The attitude that it's fine to just walk into a home under construction is still mind blowing to me. There are arsonist out there, people that just like breaking shit or say flooding the basement by turning the water on and letting it fuck things up.

I assisted/worked with builders in Chicago for 13 years. This owner/builder is a unicorn by saying he didn't care Arbery was in the property. His stance is likely a lie as he doesn't want to get sued because a black man was shot after entering his property. He's likely the one that told neighbors to keep an eye on the place. He doesn't want to be associated with Arbery's death at all and become an accessory to murder (there wasn't in this case), so he's lying.

So yes they legally confronted Arber...
160   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 24, 2:45pm  

If I were in Congress I would introduce "A Good Guy with a Gun." act.

That lays out, our right to bare arms is a constitutional right that shall not be infringed upon.
You have to the right to have a gun to defend your home and personal safety. Where lethal force is justified anything there is ample evidence the shooting went down as the shooter said, and not a slick way to cover for murder.
People need a gun to protect themselves from any tyranny from their government invading their home unjustly, and to protected against malicious criminal trespass.
No brainer always side with the shooter, after it's confirmed it went down in the lawful manner.

When do you become a good guy with a gun, vs a rouge menace at large, making a dangerous situation more volatile.

Someone that carries their gun and always have it one them where lawfully permitted, and are there first hand to witness a crime where pulling a gun is justified.
There needs to be a clear list of justified reasons, to stop someone from shouting at the store clerk is no reason to pull a gun for an example. The guy is pummeling the store clerk and is trying to rob the clerk. You're there, you're the good guy with a gun. Most likely what ever happens after that, I would say was most lawful. Especially if the assailant then attacked you, and got shot and killed.

I don't think, someone standing at the door realizing what is going on, and has an Oh Shit moment because he realizes he's unarmed so he runs out to his vehicle to retrieve his gun. I think anyone approaching a crime scene they know is a crime in progress. Because they heard screams for help, or they witnessed and left to get arms to return. They must contact 9-11 let them know who they are and where they are, and must get permission to reenter the scene. Because the police could be on the way, or there, and there are safety concerns. If it's a situation where a parish or county cops in rural areas, can't be there for 10 to 20 minutes. Then there should be a law also allowing that citizen access to go back in to engage.
I also think if you're an over weight Barney Fife that ends up getting innocent people killed by going in like John Wayne, you should be held criminally and civilly liable.

To me a Good guy with a gun, is at the scene when it goes down, and witnesses it first hand, we need more of those, We need much less guys pumped up to go running into volatile chaos, that's why the law enforcement is for.

Good Guy with a Gun legislation would guarantee that the right to bare arms is and shall never be infringed upon.
But use of deadly force, already has its own baked in laws that were violated, and the appropriate justice and be administered.
It protects every 2@ issue from becoming a Racial War issue. It cuts off Liberal's talking points to take guns away.
161   RWSGFY   2020 May 24, 3:20pm  

astronut97 says
Where was he supposed to go? He tried to avoid them multiple times and this time he was boxed in between two pickup trucks and the driver in front having jumped out with a shotgun.


I can't put myself into the stupid man's place. So I have no fucking idea were he should have went. His mom and dad should've used birth control 26 years ago, that's for sure.
162   Onvacation   2020 May 24, 3:39pm  

krc says
in CA you would be charged with simple trespassing

In California you would be housed in a nice hotel and offered a stipend to buy alcohol and drugs.
163   krc   2020 May 24, 3:51pm  

Onvacation says
krc says
in CA you would be charged with simple trespassing

In California you would be housed in a nice hotel and offered a stipend to buy alcohol and drugs.

Don't think that the benefits are just for the homeless....

In certain locations, cities will put in a drought tolerant yard for the poor at no charge. Note these are people who own houses potentially in the 7 figures but get a yard replaced as they have no "income". House rich, job poor. Scroll toward the bottom. They also have programs for general house and roof repair at no charge as long as you make below a certain threshold of income - not asset value.

https://ww5.cityofpasadena.net/water-and-power/droughttolerantlandscapes/
164   PeopleUnited   2020 May 24, 4:27pm  

jazz_music says
I think when Americans start to matter again, especially to their representatives, over the stock market, a lot of social ills will be corrected almost automatically.

The same wealthy tyrants that occupy our government with their money are using our military to improve their ROI.

We need to rise up and take our government and bring the robber barons to heel. Our government is our legitimate tool to do that, but we need to shake off all this divisive and self defeating propaganda BECAUSE THAT IS WHY WE CAN'T win.


Possibly the most reasonable perspective. The question is how can Americans matter again when a baby’s body parts are sold by Planned Parenthood for $25,000 a pop? How can Americans matter again when illegal immigrants are exploited in every way possible by everyone who can which also means taking jobs, housing and assistance that could have gone to actual Americans! How can Americans matter again when the media (owned and controlled by billionaires) and wealthy donors control who is even allowed to be a serious candidate for elected office? So I agree with you, that Americans need to join together to take our country back, and that divisive and self defeating propaganda is hindering the us from unity against those that seek to control and enslave. And that is why we need to promote Liberty at all costs, it is the only way to show the powers that be that we can still think for ourselves!
165   PeopleUnited   2020 May 24, 4:40pm  

Tenpoundbass says
I'm saying if you're going to own a gun, there should be laws that protect, or makes the case for or against the result of the commission of that gun.


We have already had many decades of common sense gun legislation, we don’t need anymore good ideas, in fact we need to review and remove any laws that violate the 2A. There are many.

No doubt it is reasonable and prudent to hold every person accountable for their actions, and if people use 2A arms for criminal activity they deserve accountability. And if people wrongly accuse others of race crime, they deserve accountability for that.

The evidence I have seen is one person trespassing on an empty construction site, then it appears he attacked an armed man who was forced to defend himself, resulting in the death of his attacker. And now we have a bunch of fools trying to accuse the men who were attacked of a crime. It is the false accusations that need to be withdrawn in order to see justice served.
166   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 24, 4:43pm  

Answer the question, did you see anything wrong with the the way Father and Son went about it?
Would have done the same thing, or would you have done things much differently?
167   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 24, 4:46pm  

Why didn't father and son both get out of the truck unarmed and take the suspect down?

One guy jumps out and the other stayed in the truck. They were not qualified to try to do what they did.


Why were they using long guns, you don't use rifles and shotguns for close quarter law enforcement.
It's a point and shoot operation, things can get ugly if you get within grabbing distance.
168   richwicks   2020 May 24, 6:34pm  

I like how everybody is arguing about this case as if the law mattered.

The law is hundreds of thousands of pages long, you couldn't read the entire thing in your lifetime, what gets enforced is from pick and choice to get a desired outcome.
169   krc   2020 May 24, 6:51pm  

richwicks says
I like how everybody is arguing about this case as if the law mattered.

The law is hundreds of thousands of pages long, you couldn't read the entire thing in your lifetime, what gets enforced is from pick and choice to get a desired outcome.


True. In this case, though, people think that the suspect's entry into a construction site was justification to hunt him down and kill him as a matter of law. I don't think so. People seem to think he was violating the law in some way, and rather contrary to your point there is actually a lot of leeway given to what is "criminal" with regards to trespassing and / or burglary. If I see someone walking through your unfenced backyard, does a legal principle exist that says that that person would have been detained? Not typically. And certainly not tracked down and then murdered.

That he "resembled a burglary suspect" is a non-starter. Leave that to the police.

Tragic.
170   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 May 24, 6:56pm  

krc says
Even breaking and entering is "iffy" - did he actually take something or not? If you break down a door (or even just push a door) to get access but no intent to steal, in CA you would be charged with simple trespassing (non-felony).


Actually, in LA County, you wouldn't.

When you have homeless people screaming at you on your property, when the cops FINALLY show up hours later, they ask the homeless leading questions so they don't have to make an arrest.

https://twitter.com/COsweda/status/1262891249448738818
171   astronut97   2020 May 24, 7:06pm  

personal

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