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Steven Rodriguez, an East Los Angeles College student, was shot and killed by Monterey Park police on Jan. 23 after officers responded to a call that he was breaking windows with a pipe-bender at the fast-food restaurant.
Rodriguez's shooting was caught on amateur video and showed officers Peter Palomino and Everado Romo, who said they feared for their safety, firing 10 rounds at him. The shooting is still under investigation by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Homicide Bureau.
Sheriff's officials said Monterey Park police were called to the restaurant after witnesses reported a man breaking windows. When they arrived, the officers saw several people run from the restaurant in their direction.
A man with a 3-foot metal bar, later identified as Rodriguez, followed immediately behind them. The officers ordered him several times to drop the bar. He did not heed the command, authorities said, and one of the officers used a Taser on him.
That did not subdue Rodriguez, who got close to officers and swung the bar at them twice, officials said.
"Fearing for their safety, an officer-involved shooting occurred," sheriff's officials said in a statement.
Why no tasers?
He had a pipe, not a knife, or gun.
The dogs may have taken him down. Don't get me wrong, my dad was an Officer of the law and I may have done the same. But trained Officers should be trained to respond differently than you or I when scared. Average people my just shoot when scared but I would expect Law Enforcement to have more protocols then simply shoot to kill. No assesment of the situation, Just treat all situations the same. That is scary to me.
That means that all of us can simply be shot dead no matter what and it be justified. Mental dissorder, drug induced, what ever. Maybe something other than shooting to kill could have been done. But I guess we will never know.
"He did not heed the command, authorities said, and one of the officers used a Taser on him."
I saw the taser employed in the video; the person appeared to not be affected by it.
. Its not like the officers get a high five and a round of drinks bought for them at the end of the day and then go back to work in the morning like nothing ever happened.
Wow! Was what you are about to see really needed?!?
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Watching someone die invokes strong emotions that are deep and visceral. Even if the person if the person was killed justifiably, I think most good people are going to feel them. The challenge is going to be in the assignment of virtue. This is a rational act and may have to struggle against some of the emotion one feels. I think virtue was on the side of the officers here.
If you watch the video with the sound turned on, the commentary from the young people filming it is telling. They see it first as entertainment, including the fact that the suspect is shot repeatedly. It's all funny and they literally giggle about it like teenage girls. Only later do they begin to form angry reactions towards the police, demanding to be removed from the scene before they assaulted the police for having shot the suspect.
Entertainment first and foremost. Reactions come later. Very telling about our society.
If you watch the video with the sound turned on, the commentary from the young people filming it is telling. They see it first as entertainment, including the fact that the suspect is shot repeatedly. It's all funny and they literally giggle about it like teenage girls.
I confess I have not watched the video clip as I have no desire whatsoever to see someone shot to death before my eyes; not just because it is a horrible thing to see but also because it is an insult to the very notion of human dignity itself to take such as entertainment (or indeed to think to film it in the first place).