Mad or perhaps featured in the next episode of American Jihadi.
Yeah but Noor's lawyer expressed their condolences...Multiple shots. There's something more to this than sitting there, calm conversation, then BOOM, BOOM, BOOM. There's something not being said yet.
...Let's say this guy was some sort of sleeper. Why in the name of all that's f'd up would he off this woman with other officers RIGHT THERE. I mean, as an LEO, he'd have all the info and expertise (if he were any good at it) to go full Dexter/Jon Burge on his enemies surreptitiously...
Now here is a totally unexpected twist to the story. For what it is worth...
First Somali-Muslim police officer in Minnesota KILLS blonde yoga instructor in cold blood - Geller Report
Interesting side discussion about "should I call the police?" Its funny, because some of our LEOs bring up, "should I go to a doctor?" The answer is the same for both. Probably not unless you really need to. Both can save your life but contact with both increases your risk of accidental injury or death. Everything in life is a risk benefit ratio. The most adamant people I know that say to avoid unnecessary medical attention or LEO encounters are, wait for it, doctors and LEOs. On the other hand when you need them, you accept the additional risk in hopes that the benefit will outweigh it.
Even this makes less and less sense.
The department's policy states that a body camera should be turned on for situations as minimal as traffic stops and for incidents as serious as use of force as long as it is safe to do so. The policy also states that if cameras are not turned on before an incident use of force, they should be turned on afterward.
Lack of Police Bodycam Video in Minneapolis Shooting Astounds Experts
Lack of Police Bodycam Video in Minneapolis Shooting Astounds Experts - NBC News
I think it's possible that the body cams are activated by lights, and/or sirens, and not running continuously.
SD cards are dirt cheap now... even the civilian dash-cam models run continuously and record 4 - 6 hours on an average 32 gig card before it begins to reloop. Drop a 128 gig card in and you've got a whole shift plus.
Relooping destroys "evidence". Every card must be uploaded and stored or "evidence" is destroyed. It doesn't matter nothing happened during a shift, it'll be a "cover up" if the footage isn't uploaded. Same as it's now "evidence" the cameras weren't on while sitting in a car.
https://www.policeone.com/police-pr...olice-body-cameras-big-costs-loom-in-storage/
[FONT=&]ST. PAUL, Minn. — The rush to outfit police officers with body cameras after last summer's unrest in Ferguson, Missouri, threatens to saddle local governments with steep costs for managing the volumes of footage they must keep for months or even years, according to contracts, invoices and company data reviewed by The Associated Press.[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The storage expenses — running into the millions of dollars in some cities — often go overlooked in the debates over using cameras as a way to hold officers accountable and to improve community relations.[/FONT]
Cahoon v. Cummings, 734 N.E.2d 535, 545 (Ind. 2000)Spoliation consists of “[t]he intentional destruction, mutilation, alteration, or concealment of evidence, usually a document. If proved, spoliation may be used to establish that the evidence was unfavorable to the party responsible.” Black's Law Dictionary 1409 (7th ed.1999). “In Indiana, the exclusive possession of facts or evidence by a party, coupled with the suppression of the facts or evidence by that party, may result in an inference that the production of the evidence would be against the interest of the party which suppresses it.”