Denver May Settle Lawsuit Over Police Shooting

May 22, 2012

  • May 22, 2012 at 1:49 pm
    Bob says:
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    Why on earth would this office think it was OK to use tracer rounds for police work? Denver should pay and then pursue subrogation against the ex employee.

    • May 23, 2012 at 11:50 am
      Matt says:
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      We are seeing the results of the federal government’s effort to militarize local police departments across the country; this has been a decades-long endeavor but it went into overdrive following 9/11. This has been exacerbated by an American culture that celebrates violence and unquestioned submission to authority. Today’s small town of 10,000 is likely to have a militarized police department complete with SWAT team. These teams generally respond wearing full battle dress- black baklava mask, armor, military fatigues, and assault rifle. A hundred protesters carrying signs are now likely to be met by a thousand officers in full battle dress, riot shields, tear gas, sound cannons, batons, and militarized high-velocity tear gas (described by Meghan Kelley as “basically a food product” but coincidentally banned for use in warfare by international chemical weapons treaties), and as Denver’s national convention demonstrated these officers might even be wearing t-shirts underneath the armor that depict a cartoon officer swinging a baton with the caption “we come out early to beat the crowds”.

  • May 22, 2012 at 2:21 pm
    Jon says:
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    Because that’s not how subrogation works.

    Regardless of that, the condition of respondeat superior would apply.



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