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Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:18 am
by Legio
Amber Guyger, who is white, allegedly mistook the apartment for hers when she shot Botham Jean, who was black, in his home in September.
Was race a factor in the shoot or did they throw that in there just because this is what MSM do ?

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Mon Dec 10, 2018 8:29 am
by Waldo1
Legio wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:18 am
Amber Guyger, who is white, allegedly mistook the apartment for hers when she shot Botham Jean, who was black, in his home in September.
Was race a factor in the shoot or did they throw that in there just because this is what MSM do ?
Honestly, probably just to inflame the story. I know that around here if there is a news article where police are looking for a suspect they usually omit race. How the hell do you ask the public for help in a BOL and not identify a suspect's race? Yet in this story they point it out?

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Tue Dec 11, 2018 6:00 pm
by Firemedic2000
Waldo1 wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 8:29 am
Legio wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 12:18 am
Amber Guyger, who is white, allegedly mistook the apartment for hers when she shot Botham Jean, who was black, in his home in September.
Was race a factor in the shoot or did they throw that in there just because this is what MSM do ?
Honestly, probably just to inflame the story. I know that around here if there is a news article where police are looking for a suspect they usually omit race. How the hell do you ask the public for help in a BOL and not identify a suspect's race? Yet in this story they point it out?
They do that here also in Tampa Bay on all but one news channel. I brought that up to my wife once not long ago. But I have to be careful.

If I raise my voice watching the NEWS my dog immediately comes to me and sits at my feet and nudges me. If I'm sitting she will get in my lap and stare at me with those big brown eyes.

Like she's saying calm down, relax :lol:

I sometimes yell at the stupid crap said in the NEWS :roll: :P

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Fri Dec 14, 2018 2:33 am
by lakelandman
I don't watch the news much anymore beside bashing Trump 24-7 and being anti-gun what's the point really.

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Fri Dec 14, 2018 10:48 am
by REDinFL
lakelandman wrote: Fri Dec 14, 2018 2:33 am I don't watch the news much anymore beside bashing Trump 24-7 and being anti-gun what's the point really.
To know the enemy. The media are the conduit through which the higher level shills inflame and incentivize the useful idiots. It's useful to be aware.

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Fri Dec 14, 2018 2:45 pm
by Skoll
CaptBarty wrote: Fri Dec 14, 2018 10:48 am
lakelandman wrote: Fri Dec 14, 2018 2:33 am I don't watch the news much anymore beside bashing Trump 24-7 and being anti-gun what's the point really.
To know the enemy. The media are the conduit through which the higher level shills inflame and incentivize the useful idiots. It's useful to be aware.
Pretty much this. To underestimate is to be defeated later. I'd rather overestimate.

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Tue Oct 01, 2019 6:29 pm
by Slartibartfast
she was found guilty of murder today


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/am ... m-n1060506

Former Dallas police Officer Amber Guyger was found guilty of murder Tuesday for fatally shooting her neighbor, Botham Jean, after thinking he was an intruder when she mistakenly entered his apartment.

Guyger, who has been out on a $300,000 bond, faces a maximum of life in prison. She was not immediately taken into custody and the sentencing phase in her trial began Tuesday afternoon with opening statements from Jean's mother.

A gasp could be heard in the packed courtroom when state District Judge Tammy Kemp read the jury's decision. Jean's family later walked out crying and embracing, many wearing red — the victim's favorite color.

Download the NBC News app for breaking news and politics

The jury was tasked with deciding whether Guyger, 31, acted reasonably when she used deadly force and if the prosecution had proven beyond a reasonable doubt that she had intentionally killed Jean. A lesser charge of manslaughter, which involves reckless conduct, was also on the table.

The jury will also decide on how to sentence Guyger. Kemp has allowed Guyger's social media posts to be admitted into evidence, including from her Pinterest page. NBC News has not verified earlier reports about her page.

Deliberations began Monday afternoon after a weeklong trial, which included the playing of the 911 call that Guyger made after shooting Jean and bodycam video from officers who responded to the scene.

Guyger was off-duty but in uniform when she twice shot at Jean on Sept. 6, 2018, just before 10 p.m., striking him in the chest. She had worked a 13-1/2-hour shift on the Dallas Police Department's crime response team that day and parked on the fourth floor of the complex's garage.

She lived on the third floor, and Jean, 26, an accountant and native of the island nation of St. Lucia, lived directly above her. The two did not know one another.

The fatal shooting led to one of the most anticipated murder trials in Dallas in decades, and became a flashpoint on the issues of police use of force and racial bias. Guyger is white and Jean was black, and the Jean family has questioned whether Guyger would have shot him if he were a different race.

Lee Merritt, an attorney for the Jean family representing them in a civil case, applauded the verdict as a "huge victory" for them as well as "all black people in America."

"It's a signal that the tide is going to change here," Merritt told reporters outside the court. "Police officers are going to be held accountable for their actions, and we believe this is going to change the policing culture all over the world."

Another family attorney, Benjamin Crump, added that Jean was the "perfect" victim — a young black man who was college-educated and doing nothing but relaxing inside his home after work.

"It shouldn't take all of that for unarmed black and brown people to get justice," Crump said.

Prosecutors said Jean was watching television and eating a bowl of vanilla ice cream in his living room when Guyger burst inside, likely scaring him. Although Guyger said that she used her electronic key fob in the lock, the door pushed open, and she immediately drew her service weapon once inside.

Testifying in her own defense last week, Guyger tearfully told jurors that she was scared for her life when she entered an apartment that she thought was hers. She said she commanded, "Let me see your hands," but the man inside began coming toward her and yelling, "Hey! Hey! Hey!"

The trajectory of the bullet showed that Jean was either getting up from his couch or cowering when Guyger fired at him, the prosecution said.

"I never wanted to take an innocent person's life. I'm so sorry," Guyger said on the stand. "This is not about hate — it's about being scared."

Guyger admitted to giving Jean minimal lifesaving aid because she had only one hand free while she called 911 and her state of mind was frantic.

Guyger, who was on the Dallas police force for more than four years, was fired from her job after the shooting. Toxicology results presented at trial showed she was not intoxicated during the shooting.

The defense brought on other tenants from the same apartment complex who testified that they had parked on a different floor and gone to the wrong unit by mistake.

Guyger's attorneys also downplayed that she had been sharing sexually explicit text messages with her work partner and was on the phone with him just before the shooting, which was revealed in the opening of the trial.

Prosecutors used those messages to make the case that Guyger was not as fatigued that day as the defense had claimed, and that Guyger intended to see her partner later that night.

They also said Guyger was at fault for missing several clues that she was on the wrong floor and went to the wrong apartment, including a red doormat that Jean's apartment had and hers did not.

The jury in Guyger's trial was made up mostly of women and people of color.

The sentencing was set to resume on Wednesday morning.

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Tue Oct 01, 2019 7:49 pm
by Joecruiser
Wow... murder? Seems a little harsh to me.
Manslaughter maybe...not murder.

She did "intentionally" intend to neutralize the threat as she thought he was an intruder.
But she never "intended" to kill as required for a murder charge.

Hopefully she'll get that thrown out on appeal.

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Tue Oct 01, 2019 8:47 pm
by Slartibartfast
Joecruiser wrote: Tue Oct 01, 2019 7:49 pm Wow... murder? Seems a little harsh to me.
Manslaughter maybe...not murder.

She did "intentionally" intend to neutralize the threat as she thought he was an intruder.
But she never "intended" to kill as required for a murder charge.

Hopefully she'll get that thrown out on appeal.

yeah there's more to the story than is being told, no way a cop is that stupid
and unaware of their surroundings to walk into the wrong apartment on the
wrong floor !

Re: off duty dallas cop enters wrong apartment and kills man inside

Posted: Tue Oct 01, 2019 10:37 pm
by Skoll
Slartibartfast wrote: Tue Oct 01, 2019 8:47 pm
Joecruiser wrote: Tue Oct 01, 2019 7:49 pm Wow... murder? Seems a little harsh to me.
Manslaughter maybe...not murder.

She did "intentionally" intend to neutralize the threat as she thought he was an intruder.
But she never "intended" to kill as required for a murder charge.

Hopefully she'll get that thrown out on appeal.

yeah there's more to the story than is being told, no way a cop is that stupid
and unaware of their surroundings to walk into the wrong apartment on the
wrong floor !
You'd be surprised.