Los Angeles: An LAPD Board of Rights has reached a decision involving a use of force incident, which resulted in the death of 13-year old Devin Brown on February 6, 2005.
On January 31, 2005, members of the Los Angeles Police Commission found the use of force out of policy. The Commission determines whether or not the use of force was within the policies and procedures of the Department. It is not the responsibility of the Commission to determine whether an officer should be disciplined for that use of force.
The Los Angeles City Charter provides that subsequent to the Police Commission action, two Commanding officers` and a civilian hear evidence and determine if the actions of the officer rise to the level of misconduct, which would require discipline.
The findings of the Board of Rights now conclude all aspects of the investigation. The Department is unable to disclose further information concerning the investigation due to State law restrictions on the release of information related to confidential personnel investigations.
In commenting on the process, Chief Bratton stated, "I regret that current laws and legal restrictions preclude both the Police Commission and me from commenting on the decision, to include what the decision is. We are both committed to transparency and are frustrated with our inability to explain our respective actions in this matter, and those of the Board of Rights."
Justice has prevailed. The exhaustive investigation followed by the Board of Rights has concluded that the officer acted within policy as he was taught. Any other decision whould have been devistating to the officers in the field who have to make split second decisions.
The indicent is now over and all should move on with their lives.
Posted by: Jim Reed | January 10, 2025 at 02:00 PM
Can anyone answer a question for me? Does the LA Police Commision have any Commissioners with any legitimate police experience? When I say "legitimate", I'm referring to time on the street, in a uniform, wearing a Sam Brown.
Posted by: Jeff | January 10, 2025 at 02:20 PM
Can the city get reimbursed now for the 1 million dollars it forked-over to the suspect's mother?
Two Captains and a civilian all said that the officer was in the right, why wouldn't a jury?
The City Atty. should be ashamed of himself for not taking this one to the box.
What does Officer Garcia get for being a victim? I'll tell ya what, NOTHING but a tarnished reputation and a red flag in his personnel folder.
The taxpayers and the officer are the true victims here, yet, unfortunately, they will be probably victimized again by the so-called leaders of this city.
Oh, I forgot to mention, what about the millions spent on investigating this shooting?
Talk about money down the drain.
Shame on City Atty. Delgadillo, PC Mack and his cronies.
Bravo to the Board of Rights folks who had the smarts to see what this shooting really was.
Posted by: Mac V | January 10, 2025 at 02:50 PM
Hey Lt, with all of the news posts on this blog, I find it hard to believe that there was not a story on the Mission Patrol officer that was shot last week while on patrol and responding to a radio call. From all of the reports that I have heard the Officer is doing good and was discharged from the hospital within hours.
It just seems like this would be more of a story than the one I am actually commenting on. It is another unprovoked attack on us. And is certainly more important than the Chief making a statement about not being able to make a statement.
Posted by: DEV P2 | January 10, 2025 at 07:33 PM
Thank God the board memebers were people with common sense. Cant say the same for the Police Commision who found this out of policy.
What training and experience does the police commission have to say what is in policy and what is not? I mean most of the commission members never had a day of police expierence in their lives. So, besides reading the policies and never having any actual expierence when it comes to police work,it is very scary that they have the power to say if something a seasoned officer did was right or wrong. They should not have that power.
Especially where Mr. Mack was in front of cameras few years ago screaming and yelling on how corrupt the LAPD was. I hope you have some better insght on how tough police work is Mr. Mack. Not everyone stans in front of officers and does as told. If that was the case, there would be no shootings, there would be no uses of forces, there would be no crime. Stop taking tools away from officers and let them do their jobs! This sity can be a very violent place, be fair to the officers to be able to protect themselves, don't tie their hands with silly nonsense policies and rules that just does not make sense. All that does is make the bad guys more bold. As a result, there is very little respect for officers on the street.
I have supervisor friends who tell me the complaint policy is so out of whack that a complaint is taken for the most obvious stupid reasons and it litterally takes days costing the city thousands of dollars for a supervisor to investigate a complain that a 5 year old kid can tell you that it's stupid. My supervsior friends say they are often times embarassed to investigate some of these complaints and have to figure out what type of questions to ask the person making the complaint that will make sense for a nonsense complaint. I am sure we can save thousands of hours investigating bogus complaints which just cries out BOGUS. Let's come up with better solutions and save the tax payerers some money. I am sure there are some leaders in the dept who feel the same way, let's see who can stand up and do what is right. Furhter more when i was told that a nut on a mental hold in a hospital or a druggie or drunk can call and make the most ridiculous accusations and the officer has to take the complaint and have it investigated over the next several days.. PLEASEEE tell me that is not true!!!!!!
Posted by: Kevin | January 10, 2025 at 11:08 PM
A true Warrior Cop. Besides the fact that the kid should not have been out at that hour nor driving a stole car OR smoking pot. I feel that Office Garcia should have moved "OUT OF THE WAY" of the car instead of being a "WARRIOR COP" AND SHOOTING.
This is why you need to knock off this crap about calling yourselfs "WARRIOR COPS". One day this will come back to bite somebody in the butt!!!
Posted by: ron | January 11, 2025 at 08:34 AM
I would like to be the civilian.
Posted by: Loves LA LEOs | January 11, 2025 at 10:59 AM
I guess my comments are not what the LAPD wants to hear. I wonder if that is the reason why my comments have not been posted.
Posted by: ron | January 11, 2025 at 03:28 PM
Keep sipping that delusional kool-aid Ron! Devin Brown was not some misunderstood kid, he was a 54 Van Ness gangster, Moniker of "Lil Willie Gangster"! And shame on you, the media and his pathetic excuse of a parent! The photo that your cronies keep trotting out in the media is of when he was 8, not the most recent which is of him gesticulating his gang signs! And further I have ajusted this saying for Ron and his ilk!
"Ron, we live in a city that has Streets, and those Streets have to be guarded by men & women with guns. Whose gonna do it? You, Ronnie? You, Mr."community" activist? We, the Warrior Cops have a greater responsibility than you could possibly fathom. You weep for Parking, and you curse LAPD Cops. You have that luxury. You have the luxury of not knowing what I know! That my existence, while grotesque and incomprehensible to you, saves lives. You don't want the truth because deep down in places you don't talk about at parties, you want me on these Streets, you need me on these Streets. We use words like honor, code and loyalty. We use these words as the backbone of a life spent defending something. You use them as a punchline! I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom and safety that I provide, and then questions the manner in which I provide it. I would rather you just said thank you, and went on your way, Otherwise, I suggest you pick up a Glock, Smith & Wesson or Berretta, and walk a footbeat in South Central Los Angeles. Either way, I don't give a damn what you think you are entitled to!"
Your welcome for the safety blanket Ron! Extract your head Ron, the veiw is much clearer out here! And thank God that Stevie is ok. And your right Steve was, is and always will be a Warrior, so suck it up Ronnie!
Steve, we are all glad that you and your family are ok. You hung tough and thank God the Department made the right choice in the end, maybe not the popular one to the "COMMUNITY ACTIVISTS."
To all my fellow Warrior Cops, STAY SAFE!
Ed O'Shea
Posted by: Ed O'Shea | January 11, 2025 at 05:46 PM
Hey Dev P2, I work at the Castle and nobody has heard of the injured Officer at Mission that was attacked. Lt De La Torre why isn't there a press realease on this incident?
Posted by: Centurion | January 11, 2025 at 10:50 PM
I love it when people make comments such as "He should have moved out of the way." It is a slippery slope that you do not want to find yourself on. Pretty soon the same thing will be said when a large muscular parolee gang memeber takes a swing at an officer. "He should have moved out of the way. In fact he should have ran to his police vehicle and locked the doors." It is the nature of the business. You find yourself in positions that require you to make choices. Running away is usually not the right choice. The choice that Steve Garcia made waa done so in less than 1 second. The critics have had over one year now to tell him what the "correct" choice was. Cut the guy a break and instead focus on the choices that Devin Brown's mother made in the 13 years that he was alive that led to him driving a stolen car in the middle of the night in South Los Angeles.
Posted by: juststartingout | January 12, 2025 at 09:06 AM
Gee Ron,
I see two posts on this blog from you...it takes a while to post comments. Just goes to prove how many people want that instant gratification that only jumping the gun can give you! Oh wait!...did I say gun? I don't want to be mistaken for a...God forbid...WARRIOR COP!
Realistically, jumping to, and on, conclusions and accusations seem to be the only exercise some people get! Besides, if coppers didn't succumb to the occasional human error, what on earth would everyone have to whine about?
Posted by: Just watching | January 12, 2025 at 11:56 AM
Mr.just starting out. I still say he should have moved out of the way and not shot the kid.
Posted by: ron | January 12, 2025 at 12:14 PM
Ed O'Shea and JustStartingOut are right on point. As the parent of a nearly 37 year old African American male, I can tell you for sure Devin Brown got a raw deal from his parents and from his community, not from Steven Garcia. When my child was born, my fears for his safety from the LAPD and LASD at that time were not unwarranted. So I protected him, and prayed for a better day. Now the officers of LAPD and LASD are the change I prayed for, and the same way I protected my child, I will protect them and fight for them with all I am and all I have. And I vote. If John Mack is still on the police commission when the mayor comes up for reelection, I will be voting for someone else.
Posted by: Loves LA LEOs | January 12, 2025 at 12:27 PM
I must have struck a nerve!!! It's reallly sad the way you people respond when someones has a different opinion. I guees the great and almighty Warrior cops have spoken and put this citizen in his place. If John Mack is not of the commision I will vote for someone else.
Posted by: ron | January 12, 2025 at 01:38 PM
WHY DO YOU MODERATE POST? IS IT BECAUSE YOU MEANING LAPD DO NOT LIKE HEARING THE TRUTH FROM THE CITIZENS WHO PAY YOUR WAGES. I BET IF YOU OFFICERS WERE LIABLE TO TAKE CARE OF YOUR OWN LAWSUITS INSTEAD OF THE TAX PAYERS PAYING FOR YOUR ATTORNEY YOU WOULD LESS LIKELY TO VIOLATE PEOPLE RIGHTS!!!
Posted by: copwatch | January 12, 2025 at 05:29 PM
WHY DO COPS PROTECT REAL CRIMINALS IN THEIR OWN ORGANIZATION? THIS IS WHAT MAKES GOOD COPS JUST AS BAD AS THE BAD ONES FOR NOT DOING WHAT IS RIGHT!!!
Officer had been warned in prior case
One more offense would probably get Steven Garcia fired, said the LAPD captain who voted not to punish him in teen's fatal shooting.
By Scott Glover, Times Staff Writer
January 13, 2025
A Los Angeles Police Department captain who voted not to discipline Officer Steven Garcia this week in the shooting of 13-year-old Devin Brown had warned him in a previous disciplinary case that one more offense would probably get him fired.
Yet that history was ignored in the Board of Rights hearing on Brown's death because LAPD rules typically do not allow an officer's past misconduct to be considered.
The realization that Garcia had previously come so close to losing his job reopened an old debate, with critics suggesting that the LAPD does not always sufficiently consider the past conduct of officers in deciding whether to punish them.
Over the last few days the Brown decision has touched off sharp recriminations in Los Angeles politics as top officials bemoaned the spectacle of an internal police panel undercutting the work of the department's civilian leadership, a Police Commission appointed by the mayor.
Because the hearing was also conducted in secret after LAPD officials closed it in response to a recent court ruling, both Police Chief William J. Bratton and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa called for new laws that would keep such procedures open. The tumult Friday even compelled Garcia to waive his privacy rights and agree to release a transcript explaining the board's reasoning.
Under LAPD rules, prior discipline can be presented as evidence in a new case only if it is used to demonstrate a pattern of misconduct. If an officer is ultimately found guilty of an offense, past discipline may then be considered in determining punishment. As with similar rules in criminal court, restrictions on the admissibility of past misconduct are intended to protect against undue prejudice.
Andre Birotte Jr., the LAPD's civilian watchdog, said the department's rules about what constitutes admissible prior conduct are too restrictive.
Regardless of whether there's a pattern, Birotte said, offenses such as lying or very specific acts alleged more than once should be made known to those sitting in judgment.
"It's a tricky issue," Birotte said, however. "It should be determined on a case-by-case basis."
Jeffrey C. Eglash, who served as the LAPD's inspector general from 1999 through 2002, said "the department has historically taken an unnecessarily narrow view" of the use of prior evidence.
"When relevant evidence about an officer's complaint or use-of-force history that would be admitted in an actual trial is excluded in a Board of Rights, that unnecessarily tilts the playing field" in the officer's favor, said Eglash, now a private attorney in Connecticut. "I think that's wrong."
In the previous disciplinary proceeding against Garcia, he received a severe 44-day suspension for, among other things, intimidating a witness not to testify against him in an excessive-force case. The presiding officer, Capt. Bruce Crosley, issued the patrolman a stern warning:
"You may rest assured," Crosley told Garcia, "that any recurrent incident will likely end your career with this organization."
Crosley, although now retired, also sat in judgment of Garcia in the Brown hearing this week.
In a telephone interview, Crosley agreed that his admonition in the earlier case contained harsh words "meant to send a message." But, having sat on scores of disciplinary panels in the interim, Crosley said he did not recall those earlier details when he served on the Brown panel with another LAPD captain and a civilian representative.
Because Garcia was found not guilty, Crosley said, his past was irrelevant.
"Our decision was based on the evidence in this immediate case alone," Crosley said.
On Friday, Ann Reiss Lane, the civilian member of the panel, said she was unaware of Garcia's previous punishment.
"That makes me very uncomfortable that I didn't know that," said Lane, a former Police Commission member.
"But," she added, "we can't know that." She declined to comment further.
Garcia fatally shot Brown in 2005 as the youth allegedly tried to back into him with a stolen car. The Police Commission, which provides civilian oversight of department policy, determined that the car was traveling no faster than 2 mph and that Garcia had stepped out of the way by the time he opened fire. The officer's contention that he fired because his life was in danger "was not objectively reasonable," the commission concluded.
Garcia's earlier disciplinary problems stem from an incident in May 1997 in which he and his partner were pursuing robbery suspects.
After a three-mile chase that led from Koreatown to Echo Park, the suspects jumped out of their car and ran in opposite directions. The officers split up and gave chase. Garcia pursued the passenger, later identified as Francisco Morales. He found Morales hiding in some bushes a couple of blocks away.
Morales told internal affairs investigators that he raised his hands in surrender as Garcia approached and that the officer ordered him to lie face-down.
When he complied, Morales said, Garcia kicked him in the face. The officer then handcuffed him and brought him to his feet, Morales said.
When he asked Garcia why he kicked him, Morales said, the officer told him "if he didn't want the charges to be worse he'd better keep quiet," records show.
Garcia gave a slightly different account in his interview with an internal affairs investigator.
The officer acknowledged kicking Morales but said he did so in self-defense, believing that the suspect was about to charge him. He denied kicking him in the head, however. He said the blow was to the suspect's torso.
Sgt. Al Ruvalcaba, who investigated Morales' complaint, said in an interview Wednesday that he determined there was sufficient evidence to charge Garcia with excessive force. But Ruvalcaba, now retired, said his captain did not formally charge the officer before the LAPD's one-year deadline had expired. As a result, the excessive-force charge did not proceed to the Board of Rights.
However, Garcia was charged with lying to investigators, threatening witnesses not to testify against him and disobeying an order not to discuss his case.
Garcia's ex-girlfriend, Grace Ferrer, told the disciplinary panel that Garcia admitted to her that he intentionally kicked Morales in the head and that he was going to lie to investigators about how the suspect was injured, documents show.
According to a transcript, board members were concerned about Ferrer's objectivity and could not determine whether she was being entirely truthful.
But they did find that Garcia had threatened Ferrer during a conversation in early 1999, before she was due to testify.
"It is the opinion of the board that the profanity and forcefulness with which Garcia admonished Ferrer not to involve herself in the complaint process was intended to serve as a threat to dissuade her from cooperating with the department," Crosley said at the time.
Garcia was also found guilty of disobeying a direct order by discussing the case with Ferrer in the first place. He was found not guilty of the remaining charges.
Posted by: COPWATCH | January 14, 2025 at 08:39 AM
It doesn't matter what Steve Garcia does, you will never satisfy some of the Monday morning quarterbacks. I distinctly remember a group of news media going to the police academy and being placed in the FATS shooting simulater and coming out in astonishment at how many innocent civilians they shot when they were forced to make a split second decision. You have to give the Garcia a lot of credit for releasing the BOR transcripts. You know what I see in him doing that? A good cop who is still trying to appease the thankless people he serves everyday by putting his life on the line everyday. Do they really think that Officer Garcia is unaffected by the life he was forced to take? If the public really thinks that officers are that callous and enjoy these kind of outcomes, then they are more clueless than I could ever possibly imagine.
Not once have I heard the so-called community leaders question why the #$%@ a 13-year-old was driving a stolen car at that time of night? So easy to judge others rather than take responsibility for your own lousy parenting. When you are guilty and you know you were wrong, you shift the blame to others. Psychology 101, it's called projectionism.
Don't be too harsh on the City Attorney though, because even though I think some things they do are totally stupid, remember that these same Monday morning quarterbacks will be the ones who sit on the jury. Remember the Rampart caper with the Miami doctor who was in a car Budget Rent-a-Car had reported stolen. The jury gave him 33 million. So there went millions of dollars to Florida!
The one thing I have to agree with though, is that we have to stop calling ourselves Warrior Cops. I have worked patrol for many years all over the City and what I can tell you is that people in the public just can't fathom the world we work in so although we know what we mean by the term Warrior Cops, the public finds it harsh and thinks it is just more proof to support their theory that it is US vs. Them. We need them to understand that it is us and the good, supportive citizens against the low life of this City. Maybe we could think up a more fitting AKA. May you all stay safe in 2007.
Posted by: JustanObserver | January 14, 2025 at 06:43 PM
****RON YOU'RE AN IDIOT!!!!! YOU BLEEDING HEART!!!! You don't even know what you are talking about. Maybe you should be out on the street, and move out of the way when a car is about to strike you. We are not here to second guess the officer. We don't know what it's like to work in the streets of Los Angeles, especially areas such as, South Central, Skid Row, etc. I've always said, these officers don't get the praise or pay that they should. We never hear about officers doing a good job, only internally do you hear that. No, we only hear idiots like you, and the "wonderful" community activists speaking their garbage.****
^^^^KUDOS to Mr. O'Shea & Just Starting Out! I just wish we had someone who could come out and say all of this on live t.v. Of course, it will never happen. It makes me sick to hear about this and other cases (i.e. Jose Pena) where it's always the officer's fault. These people never want to take responsibility for their actions. I want to know where the hell this kids mother is. She's out spending her money. She knew what her son was doing, and she still had the nerve to sue the city. People like her are what makes her community a disgrace. There is a long list of others, but the Susie Pena Family is another disgrace. Hey Ron, should the cops have moved out of the way when that idiot was shooting at them? Or, should we have waited for him to shoot someone else, and the have to listen to why the cops didn't do anything? ^^^^
****Being an LAPD Wife, it irritates me to read these types of comments. I have learned to try and read and ignore most of what gets on this blog, but when idiots such as Ron write of bunch of garbage, what to do? I have yet to read something about us. We have wonderful places such as, wives association, lapdwife. In Manhattan Beach, we have a wonderful group of ladies that are wives of officers with various agencies. I would love the idiots at the LA Times to write an article about us. No one ever writes articles about the other side of what is going on in the mind of an officer when he is being challenged – his family!!! Ron, do you really think an officer doesn't think - will it be me or the thug who is driving a car, or shooting at me? LA City is getting worse. Gone are the days when my father-in-law patrolled Skid Row, and being a cop was a great. It’s still a great profession, one to be admired. With people like you and the ACLU, and every other garbage activist, you guys take away what is good about being an officer. I hope you leave this blog, and never write again, but my guess is, you won’t. You also don't know what it is like to kiss your wife/husband goodbye, then pray and wait for him to walk through the door. When they do come in at EOW, then you know he did his job, and he did it well.****
Posted by: Kat | January 15, 2025 at 08:09 PM
The comments in this blog appear counter productive. I wonder how many idiotic comments need to be made in this forum before the press starts printing from this blog and the public reacts in its usual fashion. You have a dead 13 year old boy who was on his way to being a gang member and the public is mad that an officer shot him. If the public wants you to dive out of the way before blasting a bunch rounds down range, then listen carefully. It is clear that being an officer is unfair and political and that is unfortunate. If the L.A. public and your mayor's appointees want to discipline someone and you fail to do it, then beware the consequences. Mob rule may not get that officer fired, but there are enough people in power who listen to the public who will change the way the LAPD does business. Continue calling the officer a victim and the kid a gang member. Keep speaking ill of Mack and the police commission. These people got rid of Gates, brought in Williams, then brought in Parks and implented the consent decree. Fairness, due process and sympathy for police officers weren't considered for the LAPD during those decisions. How will the people with legitmate power react to this decision? What type of rules and laws will they put in place to send your Board of Rights a message?
Posted by: Rob | January 15, 2025 at 09:52 PM
I find it interesting the Chief is contributing to the ongoing "controversy" on whether UOF boards and BOA hearings should be open to the public. The LA Times, community "activist", and all the other left leaning legal pundits are wringing their hands over not being able to obtain board transcripts. But Chief when is the last time the LATimes has not been able to somehow get a hold of supposedly confidential documents? The LAPD has a history of leaking officer's allegedly confidential personal packages to the LA Times. Times reporters have knocked on officer's doors; they have trotted out decade old allegations of misconduct, etc. How did they get that information?
Officer Garcia headed off the LATimes obtaining the transcripts of the hearing by releasing them through his attorneys. But does anybody have any doubts the Times all ready had a copy? The controversy of the "secret" meetings (they make it sound like it the meetings are held in some underground bunker, with machine gun toting guards) is nothing but the Times wanting to sell more papers. The Times will always be able to obtain confidential documents in this City. There is no such thing as a secret meeting, especially within the Department with so many trying to position themselves for the next big promotion.
The question is: Why did the Times bury the fact that Officer Garcia released the transcripts himself? Why are they not talking about the testimony and investigation revealed in the transcripts? Is it because a thorough and complete investigation showed Officer Garcia reacted reasonably that tragic night? Of course the fact that a LAPD officer acted lawfully and reasonably does little to the bottom line of selling papers and holding on to "activist" titles.
Posted by: JB | January 16, 2025 at 08:33 AM
Ron & Copwatch...
Why do you paint the entire LAPD or Cops in general with one broad stroke of the brush? Racists have the same mentality.
Copwatch, when you try to run over a police officer as little Devon tried to do, you become an immediate threat and police officers have the right to use deadly force if they fear for their life or the lives of others as was clearly the case here. He would have had his day in court had he not tried to run over Officer Garcia, so would have the two guys who dressed up in bullet proof kevelar suits and shot up the Bank of America in North Hollywood...what part of that don't you understand?
Police don't violate people's civil rights, they catch bad guys and thugs and take them off the street so you can be safe. But if you feel that a police officer has violated your rights or the rights of someone you know, feel free to go to the front desk of your local station and file a report, and you can bet it will be fully investigated, as the LAPD has no place for nasty, rude or otherwise unfriendly police officers...
Posted by: Line Reserve Guy | January 16, 2025 at 11:31 AM
COPWATCH = malcontent degenerate GANG member!!! Double up on the medication COPWATCH your relapsing! You and all your cronies over there at COPWATCH are a farce and I wonder with a piss poor attitude like yours why you have had a tough time with authority?!? COPWATCH is an antipolice, Antiestablishment, Anti-Community HATE GROUP, who would like anarchy to overtake Los Angeles. And they vilify the Police and anyone who disagrees with them racist titles. But it is they who are hate-mongers, and gang facilitators. All COPWATCH supporters and "activists", DON"T call me when your getting your HEAD KICKED in by the very gangsters that you profess to speak for! Though if I see it happen me and my fellow WARRIORS will most likely intervene, but please be sure to alert us as to who you are so we can get you a supervisor to cry and complain to, and don't worry I won't disappoint you if the suspect is violent and combative, you'll get a good show for your YOUTUBE compilation, you SLAP! A pugilistic display for you to cringe over! When the moe's at COPWATCH are in a huff, I know that we, The LAPD, are doing something right!
Thank you to all the Police Officers wives & Family members that don't get thanked nearly enough!
And to all my fellow Warriors, hit hard, hit quick and KEEP ON HITTING until the threat STOPS!
Stay Safe
Ed O'Shea
Posted by: Ed O'Shea | January 16, 2025 at 12:40 PM
Copwatch & Ron,
Although your lack of common sense,intelligence, and lack of reasoning comments do strike a nerve of the individuals that go out day and night to protect your right to voice those absurd comments, we keep in mind that you are just part of the loud mouth minority and in reality, the overwhelming & passive majority respects and supports police officers.
Copwatch, you mention that my boy, Ed, is watching too many movies. I too recognize the scene from "A Few Good Men" but on that note let me remind you, "Training Day" is fantasyland, make-belive, a little far-fetched, if you're hearing me.
Also, as I've said before, all of us in blue are taxpayers also, therefore, before you jump on that "I pay your salary" band wagon, keep in mind that since we are taxpayers, we pay our own salaries, self employed. But if you still feel that you have contributed to our salary, I have your contribution, a penny, in my pocket that you can have back!
To all the "good guys" out there, stay safe.
Posted by: Jeff | January 16, 2025 at 01:32 PM
My first impulse as I was reading this blog was to write in about my personal pet peeve: monday morning quarterbacking from people who have no useful experience in the area of which they criticize. I have never enforced the law, fought in a war or run into a burning building and until I do I have no right or authority to critique the work of people who have or do and as far as I'm concerned neither does anyone else. Bottom line is we don't know what it is like to have make those decisions. The only opinion I want to hear is from someone who has been in the trenches, so to speak.
That was my first impulse until I came to the blogs posted by CopWatch. I was so disturbed by those entries that I went up on their website to see what they were about and it appears that this organization is dedicated to the eradication of effective policing if not all policing. CopWatch posed the question: what rights and freedoms do the police protect for us (paraphrased)? Let me address that from a layman's perspective. As a tax paying citizen and mother of a small child I have the reasonable expectation of safety--to go to work, run my errands, play with my daughter and be in my home without myself or my family being robbed, raped, harrassed or brutalized in any way. And who is going to protect that right for me? Not Copwatch. Who will I call if some is threatening myself of my child? Not Copwatch. I'm calling 911 and requesting police and until Copwatch can provide that protection better than the police, I don't want to hear from them.
Meanwhile, thank you to the police officers who risk their lives to defend my right and who get to deal with the likes of Copwatch as a reward. I don't know how you do it--I couldn't. My guess is that Copwatch couldn't either.
Posted by: Kelly | January 16, 2025 at 01:47 PM