darkcgi said:my hate for cops doesnt come out of my ass it comes from experience
my hate for cops doesnt come out of my ass it comes from experience
Austin Police Cpl. Anthony Hipolito told ABCNews.com that the officer did respond to the wrong address, but it was the address provided by the 911 call. The call came from the house next to Paxton's.
Do US police officer wear pepper spray ( ours do ) like postmen ( ours do ) to ward off animals ?
The article said this went down within 30 seconds.
So, in 30 seconds it's expected that after confronting the dog owner (which at the time was assumed to be one involved in the domestic abuse call), he should be able to ascertain the cause for the call, deem the scene, and the man he has confronted to be safe, safety, and holster his duty weapon, draw his pepper spray or tazer, and fire. All while a dog is charging at him, and barking. A dog that the OWNER could not even manage to get control of. Sorry, but pepper spray was not a viable alternative given this situation.
This officer did nothing wrong. Aside from going to the wrong house due to bad information provided by 911.
The article said this went down within 30 seconds.
So, in 30 seconds it's expected that after confronting the dog owner (which at the time was assumed to be one involved in the domestic abuse call), he should be able to ascertain the cause for the call, deem the scene, and the man he has confronted to be safe, safety, and holster his duty weapon, draw his pepper spray or tazer, and fire. All while a dog is charging at him, and barking. A dog that the OWNER could not even manage to get control of. Sorry, but pepper spray was not a viable alternative given this situation.
This officer did nothing wrong. Aside from going to the wrong house due to bad information provided by 911.
You don't need to holster your weapon before pulling the pepper spray.
Tim said:No where in the story did it say the dog was sprinting towards the officer.
"The officer was basically in retreat and asked the owner to grab the dog," Hipolito said. "He was unable to and the dog continued to attack and that's when the officer discharged his firearm."
30 seconds are an eternity...
you can't tell me that a this guy didn't have time to pull his pepper spray after he heard the dog barking and running after him.
You don't need to holster your weapon before pulling the pepper spray.
No where in the story did it say the dog was sprinting towards the officer. It says the dog was challenging him and barking, exactly what my dog would do if you came onto my property. Hell, I would have said the same thing to the cop, "Don't shoot, the dog won't bite" If this went down as fast as you think it did, he would have never had the time to tell the cop the dog wouldn't bite.
This was a scared cop that shit his pants because a 50lb dog was barking at him.
:homo:Yes, according to this article the office had pepper spray and a taser on him.
I would be pissed that the officer used excessive force, he did not need to shoot the dog. Pepper spray works just as good on animals as it does people.
Yet we are all still here with no dead dogs to show for it.
I don't care how you slice it up, this dog at 50lbs was not a threat to this officers life. Even if properly trained a 50lb dog would not have killed the officer.
Actually, I've been involved in 2 incidents where lethal force was used against dogs.
Didn't you just admit earlier that you didn't know that pepper spray works on dogs?
So you were present when these dogs were killed? And what were the circumstances?
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