Good lord no - but we're considering their motivations, not their suitability for the force. I mean, how would you even know until they did that.is that who you want wearing a badge & carrying a gun?
It's relevant to whether or not they thought they'd get away with it which is what we were discussing. IF he was simply beaten they might get away claiming resisting arrest. I don't think they expected he would die from the beating, which makes it pretty hard to get away with ,Irrelevant. Completely irrelevant.
Arguably true, unless you believe the 'systemic racism' part which would obviously have affected them after joining. I suppose it's possible they were mostly fine when they applied and were screened but became this way after being exposed to it after they became cops.Racism or Ego or something else, it was an example of a poor screening in the hiring process
Yeah, but from a real world practical point of view you're talking about the work of decades. It would take a very long time to 'try' any of it and accurately review the results, never mind a 'few here and a few there'.Pick one or two to try here, pick one or two to try there, track the results, & use the results to implement changes across the board. Worse case is that it doesn’t improve things without making them worse.
I guess better screening might well be the place to start but there's no way to be sure they didn't learn that behavior AFTER they started.