"blacks are treated differently by the police"??? Blacks commit 3 times the amount of violent crime as whites and commit 54% of all murders. Black inner cities are amongst the most dangerous in the world so of course cops are MUCH more cautious and guarded in black communities. its not the cops fault that black communities are so violent. what happened to Breonna Taylor happens to whites but the media never reports it. blacks are actually treated more delicately by the police than whites. its part of black privilege.
The local media may report these police shootings related to warranted police raids of residences... but it rarely gets attention from the national media if the individuals in the residence shot or killed by the police are not a minority. Nor are there protests over what happened.... usually the only follow-up is legal action filed by the family against the police department which is handled many months later and only covered in the local media.
Thanks, Van. I read the whole thing - it was nothing more than a finely crafted article with the intent to post the victim and her companion in the most angelic manner possible, and the police made out to be evil. I am not surprised. Weeding out all of the superfluous and completely useless (unless you are looking to have your emotional senses compromised by journalism) flair, the following facts in the case remain: Three plain clothes police officers executed a warrant obtained by a judge with a "no-knock" provision at 12:40am on March 13th. These officers knocked and announced themselves as police. Neighbors claim to have not heard the knocking or the announcement, but at 12:40am, this is not surprising. Walker claims he heard knocking, but no identification of police. Walker fired the first shot (key point here) which was his only shot and with one shot wounded one of the deputies in the leg. Immediately, all officers returned fire. Between the three officers, approximately 20 return shots were fired. Of these, 6 hit Taylor as she was in the hall where Walker had fired from. One hit her in the foot. She died from her wounds. Nothing else at this point matters. Not whether they were at the wrong house (they weren't) or whether drugs were found (they weren't) or whether anyone had any prior conviction for drugs (they didn't) or whether Taylor worked at a hospital (she did). All of that us irrelevant. What matters is that an officer serving a legal warrant was shot first in the leg, and then responded with lethal force back into the house. The officer is in his right to protect himself, as are the other officers. If Walker hadn't escalated the encounter with gunfire, none of this would have happened. It is tragic. But the police aren't guilty of overreacting. To expect the police to not return fire when fired upon is asinine.
Black privilege? Hahaha. Blacks serve longer sentences for the same crimes. NYC came out and said they specifically targeted young black/Hispanic men with stop & frisk, because they fit the demographic. Young black men are clearly stopped based on stereotypes (true or not) rather than just on individual behavior.
I read it. You may not like my opinion on whether the police are guilty of overreacting, but that's the beauty about opinions. We can each have our own.