Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
shooting to kill
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No best answer has yet been selected by justineo. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Re the amount of shots fired, surely this is to ensure that the target is definitely dead, and not just injured but still capable of detonating a device. Obviously not the case in this instance, but probably SOP.
It's very sad that this guy was killed, but I feel that the police were acting on the best information they had, and probably did the right thing in the circumstances.
I am curious as to why the armed police are not uniformed. They can hardly blend in with a gun across their fronts, and again, I will reiterate, if I saw somebody coming after me with a gun in their hands but with no police insignia, I think I would run away.
Any sensible reason these people aren't uniformed?, or why there weren't uniformed officers on scene at same time?
Didn't eye witnesses state they heard shouts of 'police stop'
Good practical answer, MargeB, understanding the dilemma the police face.
Interesting statement from Lord Stevens, who introduced a shoot to kill policy for terrorists when he was Met commisionner.I saw it in the News of the World of all places. Not all kiss and tell stories.
Oneeyedvic. I think your remark about wearing a thick coat because he may have been cold is way off the mark. My wife is from Thailand,current temp 35 and I've never known her, or any of her Thai friends, to wear any outer garment in weather like we had on Thursday.
I think London is hoaching at the moment with 'cleaners, roadsweepers, and newspaper vendors' in disguise, I think the arms are probably concealed nearby, maybe in a car.
Maybe it's time for them to carry caps, so that they are at least identified. I was once in an identical situation to this young man, but in the Congo. A car pulled alongside four of us, by our house, and two men got out shouting 'Police!' while pointing small handguns at us. I guess they may have been police, we just ran for our lives. If I know he doesn't have a good reason to point a gun at me, but he is doing so, I assume he is a hostile threat and run.
Anyone who acts as this victim did invites extreme suspicion and direct action by officers who are not only highly trained and accountable but putting their own lives at risk every time they go to work. Yes I know they chose the job and they're paid a decent whack but you still have to realise that the police were acting in the best interests of EVERYONE not just themselves.
If any good can come out of this I hope it will be that other chancers think twice before acting like a complete idiot.
If you put plain-clothes police into uniforms they become uniformed. Possibly concealed revolvers rather than assault rifles.
I hope my own death is the right one 'in the circumstances'.
What's the betting it now all goes pc and the poor pc gets done for murder ?
I think this is not a good time to break into a run and vault over barriers in central London, but anyway may our own God go with us.
Many good points here. But he'd have had to have been living on another planet not to know that the events of the past few weeks have led to such major, increased security. If he spoke perfect English, why run from armed police? And not only run, but jump over various obstacles in the way for a fair stretch. It is a tragedy, but in my opinion the police have not killed him. He is another innocent victim murdered by those suicide bombers that the police are trying to put an end to.
Also, I think it unfair to label the officer who fired the shots "trigger happy" - if that was the case he would have shot a lot sooner. My heart not only goes out to the dead man's family, but to the police officer who now knows he shot and killed an innocent man. Surely living with that is a terrible burden to bear?
chompu - personally I think that everyone has a different metabolism. I can be sitting here in my lounge at normal temperature wiht my wife next to me freezing. Everyone I know feels the cold in differeent ways. If someone is cold, they usually wear a coat.
Let me remind you that he was innocent. He was (in my opinion) obviously wearing a coat because he was cold!
Havent read all of the answers on here but have read enough to get the general idea of what is being felt by most people. It is a very sad incident.
Just a thought, if a gang of plain clothed police chase you armed, even if they are telling you to stop, with everything that is going down in London would you stop and take the risk they are who they say they are or would you just keep on running?
and another thought if the police thought he had a bomb under his clothing why did 5 policemen jump on him and pin him down and risk detonating any device they thought he was carrying on his person?
I guess we'll never know the full facts of what happened that day but it seems like it could get a whole lot worse before it gets better.