New Orleans housing authority cop shot, killed
Source: Gannett
NEW ORLEANS A police officer for New Orleans' public housing agency was shot and killed Sunday while working overtime to patrol an agency construction site, city police said.
The officer is the first to die in the line of duty since the Housing Authority of New Orleans' security department became a full-fledged police force in April 2012, said Lesley Thomas, spokeswoman for the agency.
"The death of this HANO police officer is an unspeakable tragedy, and a vile and cowardly act," Mayor Mitch Landrieu said in an emailed statement. The officer was 45 years old and had worked for the department since 2013.
The patrol car apparently had rolled one to two blocks after the officer was shot before hitting a curb and stopping, Landrieu said.
Read more: http://www.shreveporttimes.com/story/news/crime/2015/05/24/new-orleans-housing-authority-cop-shot-killed/27894483/
840high
(17,196 posts)NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)Angola for life should be a deterrent for anyone with a working brain cell.
cstanleytech
(26,080 posts)Skittles
(152,964 posts)NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)Comrade Grumpy
(13,184 posts)Without knowing any more about this case, all I can say is too bad for that officer.
NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)You never disappoint, CG.
RiverNoord
(1,150 posts)I'm not 'crying out for justice' because:
1) Threat to life or limb are risks that all law enforcement officers must accept when they take on the job. The job is, in fact, largely about neutralizing evident threats to the public peace, and these evident threats are sometimes people deploying firearms.
2) It is an injustice when a law enforcement officer is killed, wounded, or otherwise harmed in the faithful conduct of his/her duty. It is an injustice which is, however, inevitably predictable, in the sense that some law enforcement officers who are entrusted with and assume the role of protection of the peace will be violently harmed by those whose violence they are tasked to stop.
3) This injustice is not somehow a lesser injustice than, for example, violent harm unnecessarily caused by law enforcement officers who abuse their unique authority. However, it is different in nature. Law enforcement officers must accept risk as an essential part of their jobs, much like those who take on the job of a member of the military. When a law enforcement officer is killed or wounded in the line of duty, we grieve, but we also generally regard the loss as a sacrifice made by the officer, who worked under the assumption that such a sacrifice might result from his or her commitments to his or her job and its duties.
4) We do not assume, on the other hand, that people not tasked with this job accept that, due to the fact that there are people who disturb the public peace, sometimes violently, being killed or wounded in the course of their regularly daily existence is a sacrifice made on behalf of others and in the conduct of their role as a citizen. There is no duty conferred upon people who are not law enforcement officers to act similarly to them and possibly bring an end to violence by employing violence of their own. They do not receive sanctioned equipment and training in order to carry out such tasks. It is generally the case that threats to public peace that a private person is not intimately associated with should be avoided by non-law enforcement officers, and that attempts to act similarly to law enforcement officers in such circumstances are extremely undesirable, that they may lead to exacerbation of the original problem, and possibly the greater endangerment of law enforcement officers and others. The injustice of a person who is not a law enforcement officer being harmed by another's violence is therefore different. Such a person has not voluntarily assumed such risk as a condition of the person's occupation.
5) In this case, the closes approximation to justice that we have devised is almost certain to come - the killer has been identified and apprehended.
I've lost a sheriff's deputy friend to death in the line of duty. He was a good man and a good law enforcement officer. He left behind a cherished family. It was an injustice. However, I, and his family, will always recognize that he died doing something that he believed in, and that he understood and accepted the risk that ultimately cost him his life.
You certainly hold no punches. I agree btw.
BumRushDaShow
(127,281 posts)NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)shoots a criminal threatening his or her life, we always get the "they didn't have to shoot him!" comments. Every time, dozens or hundreds of them without fail. However a police officer is killed and there's barely a handful of comments.
Typical.
BumRushDaShow
(127,281 posts)And certainly, the FOPs have a powerful presence in most cities and cities hold very elaborate ceremonies to honor fallen officers (where other officers nationwide come to pay respects and friends/neighbors of the officer also attend). We had one poignant event here in Philly just a couple months ago - http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Funeral-for-Officer-Robert-Wilson-III-Medal-of-Valor-Ramsey-Gamestop-Shooting-Death-296328271.html
Criminals are criminals and would kill their own families (and often do) for whatever reason that is often only known by them. The difference is that when non-criminals are profiled, hunted, targeted, followed, stopped, harassed, threatened, beaten, and sometimes killed by cops because they "fit the description", then that should not go unchallenged.
What is bad, IMHO, is assuming that because the individual has a "badge" then they cannot be considered a "criminal", as that reasoning is just ludicrous.