Fear....a uniform.....and a gun is what is dangerous.A kid all alone on a bus with a pocket knife is not,,,,,,,
Center of body mass is kill. What do you think it means. Your heart is located in that very center.
Location of the heart.It means center of mass, police aren't trained killers.
My brother-in-laws brother is a Mountie and has been for over 30 years. According to him the training is;
Shoot at the center of whatever part of the body you can see, if you can only see his arm you shoot at the center of that. They aren't trained to kill, they're trained to react in defense of themselves and the public.
You're thinking of death squads in places like Central America.
btw, I don't know many people who have their hearts in their solar plexus. The heart is slightly above and to the left of the center of mass.
Location of the heart.
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You should then clarify the situations. I worked for an RCMP Officer who was on their Tactical Response Team for 9 years.
Police training: ‘You shoot until the threat has stopped,’ use-of-force trainer says | Toronto Star
“You shoot until the threat has stopped,” Valois said. Officers are not trained to shoot a weapon out of someone’s hand — something Valois said is next to impossible. They also aren’t trained to shoot out knees or other extremities. Officers aim for the largest “centre of mass,” generally a person’s torso.
“The concept is to incapacitate the threat,” said Rick Parent, also a former police officer of 30 years in B.C. who now teaches in the police studies program at Simon Fraser University. That usually takes a least a couple of rounds, Parent said, possibly four or more. “That’s what they’re trained to do.”
Though officers don’t intend to kill the person, they often do, Parent said, because the centre of mass is home to vital organs and arteries.
Both Valois and Parent said officers in Toronto and elsewhere in Canada are trained that within six to nine metres, a person armed with a weapon can close in on them before they have time to draw their weapon — a concept first developed by Utah police Sgt. Dennis Tueller and aptly named the Tueller Drill.
Parent said there is no set distance for when an officer should or shouldn’t choose to shoot someone, especially once their gun is drawn. That is up to the officer’s judgment.
“If they do move, then they’ll probably discharge their firearm,” Parent said.
He added: “Sometimes it’s a judgment error . . . They’re human beings first, police officers second.”
Those last 6 almost gave him a full on first degree murder. He was lucky the Crown didn't proceed with that charge.
2nd Degree is almost as difficult- Must prove intent to murder.It may have actually made it easier for him. Proving first degree murder is a lot harder than second degree murder.
2nd Degree is almost as difficult- Must prove intent to murder.
That will be all about the pause in firing.
And plugging six bullets into a dying, twitching man.
From what I understand officers charged in similar circumstances were all found not guilty.
That will be all about the pause in firing.
What is an appropriate length of time to think about killing somebody?That may have something to do with corruption in the system. The latest case that comes to mind is that of Monty Robinson, charged with vehicular homicide and tasering the immigrant at the airport. Did he actually spend so much as a night in jail? Things do have a habit of evening out over time and I'm guessing Mr. Robinson some day will mysteriously turn up "in a compromised condition".
From what I understand, for a charge of 1st degree murder to stick, there has to be "malice aforethought" and previous planning. I doubt very much if that applies here, in a specific sense. I'm not sure how a general attitude of "blow the bastards away" would apply.
What is an appropriate length of time to think about killing somebody?
Not much if you have the means and think you have the authority to do it because you're wearing a badge.
There were plenty of other options and time to consider them but he acted as Judge Judy and executioner.