Cops pepperspray 84 year old

PoliticalNick

The Troll Bashing Troll
Mar 8, 2011
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You might be right. I can't imagine my condition making ne soray an 84-year-old woman, but it has made me do things people would't understand, so I figured who knows, could a particular situation cause a cop to do this beyond his control?

But I don't know the details and it should be investigated.

There are supposed to be psychological evaluations done during the hiring/training process to weed out anyone with mental health issues. I don't know of any jurisdiction where a person with PTSD or any other mental problem is considered a viable candidate. Most will also retire any officer diagnosed with a mental disorder during their time in the department.
 

Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
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There are supposed to be psychological evaluations done during the hiring/training process to weed out anyone with mental health issues. I don't know of any jurisdiction where a person with PTSD or any other mental problem is considered a viable candidate. Most will also retire any officer diagnosed with a mental disorder during their time in the department.

True enough, though slips can occur where it's discovered after an incident like this one.
 

personal touch

House Member
Sep 17, 2014
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Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). I suffer from it, though in my case it's transgenerational stress. Same thing as PTSD except passed on from parents.

It"s common among residential school survivors and their children, and police officers, fire-fighters, paramedics, soldiers and other such people and their children too.

You're right. It messes with the brain. In specific environments I have no control over my emotions, sudden adrenalin rush, fight or flight, increased heart rate and breathing, uncomfortable, panic attack. The worse I've ever done in such a state was break things like CD's. Oh, I forgot, and a couple self-harms that had landed me in hospital.

I can easily imagine how, under the right conditions, a police officer could kill a person while in such a state and have a very legitimate defence.

It's not like he could see it coming.

When it happens, it happens.

Thanks for mentioning this. Now that I think about it from a cop's point of view, there is no telling his state if mind at the time.

I'm just happy that in my case, such panick attacks are now few and far between and far less intense than they used to be. But some situations will still cause me to tense up and freeze emotionally.

That has certainly made me more sympathetic to addicts of sll kinds. Compulsive behaviour is an effective psychological escape mechanism from the sudden panick attack, but it's also a recipe for easy addiction if you're not careful. In my case for example, I can't deven drink alcohol.
I don't think you can have vanilla symptoms with PTSDeach individual will be plagued with symptoms of different degrees within this disorder,this is where recognition becomes s little tricky ,and more do assistance is readily available
Macho you are fortunate to have classic symptoms ,proven paths of treatment are in existence
Myself,In some ways I have embraced my disorder,and have moved on as best as I can
Of course there are so times.....

Not familiar with the cross generation thing
But strongly believe most of the population has some form of PTSD

What about noise association?Isnt that weird?

Do you suffer from noise association?