529 points
*

Headline is kind of funny, but I wanted to know what he shot at

In body cam footage shared across social media, the officer was seen jumping to the ground and shouted “shots fired” after the acorn strikes the roof of his car. He then turned and emptied every bullet from his gun, each aimed squarely at his squad car.

Funny again…

While Hernandez fired on the car, Marquis Jackson, who was accused of stealing his girlfriend’s car, was in the back of the police cruiser. Officers had searched, handcuffed and loaded the accused into the back of the police car and, despite being cuffed, it was Jackson that the officer thought was shooting at him.

Nope, he was trying to kill someone handcuffed in the back of his squad car and had already been searched for weapons.

Cop should at least be facing reckless endangerment, if not attempted murder.

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282 points

He also yelled “I’m hit” while unloading on his own vehicle.

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279 points

Same as when they think they’re doing on fentanyl…

After hearing the sound of the acorn, the deputy reported that he also felt a “tingliness” all along the side of his body. He then said his “legs just give out” and he fell to the ground, assuming that he had been seriously injured by something.

Because of this, the video also showed Hernandez complaining about feeling “weird” and shouting to his colleague that he’s been hit. It’s all very dramatic.

Cops are constantly terrified because of their training, so they panic and mistake a panic attack for something else.

Being a cop sucks so much (because of their own leadership and culture) that good qualified people do t want to be a cop. So we end up with these fragile snowflakes that shouldn’t be allowed to carry at all. Let alone be a cop

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109 points

These idiots are so convinced that merely touching fentanyl will make them collapse that it actually happens to them.

If fentanyl was that strong, people would buy one bag and it would last for like a year.

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22 points
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good people get fired as cops because they hesitate to shoot unarmed people and won’t lie for officers doing questionable things.

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5 points

My goodness what a fucking snowflake. Maybe you shouldn’t be in the profession if you’re “scared shitless” 99% of the time. But we all know that’s a cover for them. They love killing people.

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5 points

…fragile snowflakes that shouldn’t be allowed to carry at all.

Yeah but deputy tacticool has holo sights. Not wasted on him at all.

Poor Durango.

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2 points

Training? What training?

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24 points

“It hit my vest” and “I feel weird”. Them be signs that his fat ass has coronary artery disease. Fucking Okaloosa County. Good riddance. Don’t miss it.

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22 points

Is he trying to use the South Park ‘He’s coming right for us’ defense?

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7 points

Aren’t they all?

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79 points

Even if he wasn’t trying to kill Marquis Jackson, he clearly didn’t care if he killed him.

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43 points

You don’t mag dump like that if you don’t care. He very much was trying to kill him.

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29 points

You do if you’re an idiot and a coward.

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6 points

this is their training. its SOP to do exactly this.

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60 points

I deal with PTSD vets every day so I understand the snap buuuuut… No one else gets to get away with a slap on the wrist because of their mental illness so fuckem

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58 points

Yeah. The “having PTSD” part isn’t what should be punished, it’s the “and yet still carrying a gun while putting yourself in a position to have your PTSD triggered like this” part that’s egregious.

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10 points

Well, Philip Brailsford, the murderer who murdered Daniel Shaver, claimed PTSD for murdering Daniel so he could draw on his pension and retire early. Because he murdered someone and it hurt his fee-fees.

Fuck that.

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9 points

I mean. Being in combat and being a cop are two different things.

Maybe this guy was in a shootout and has PTSD, maybe this is the only time he’s ever fired on duty and he’s just a coward who panicked.

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16 points

During the course of the investigation into the shooting, deputy Herandez resigned from the force.

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5 points

And most of us would still wait for an actual target in a built up area.

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2 points

No where in the article does it mention PTSD.

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2 points

See I’m like, I don’t even think you could qualify most of the things you would do to this guy as being punishment. Preventing this guy from being a cop forever (pretty unlikely, but could happen), isn’t really a punishment. If he’s discharging his firearm into his own car, he’s obviously just unfit to be an officer and that’s a pretty clear safety concern. If you sent him to prison, that might be more of a “punishment”, but that’s also, you know, what cops do basically their whole careers, is send people to prison, and we still have all the same problems with the prison system as we’ve always had, so, you know, I’m like. I dunno. That doesn’t seem like a clear “win”, to me, both in terms of improving society and in terms of helping him out if he’s mentally ill which, you know, seems to clearly be the case, here.

You could also maybe think, hey, this guy goes to an asylum or something for mental illness, but that kind of has the same problems as sending someone to prison, it’s not usually a helpful system.

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38 points

Cop should at least be facing reckless endangerment, if not attempted murder.

The review board found his conduct was not reasonable; so, it’ll be up to the prosecutor (which I’m sure in FL is an office eager to go after cops). The other officer, who began shooting after the officer wearing the bodycam in the OP began shooting, was found to have acted reasonably.

Essentially, you can’t think an acorn is a bullet and get away with shooting at a detained and secured civilian. But, if another officer on scene thinks, even unreasonably so, that an acorn is a bullet and starts shooting at a detained and secured civilian, you can too. If this doesn’t make a lot of sense to you, take that as reassurance that your critical thinking remains, at least partially, intact.

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17 points

Nah, it kind of makes sense for the second guy.

Remember, he’s not getting triggered by the acorn, he’s reacting to his coworker yelling that they’ve been shot and actual gunfire. That’s a justified reason to pull out your weapon IMO

Granted, he should’ve tried to take control of the situation and de-escalate so he could “save” his panicked coworker, but that kind of calmness “under fire” would take actual training

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10 points

It does mean that the assisting officers aren’t required to actually confirm their target, though.

What if this was real. If a 3rd party shot at them. 1st officer fires, blindly assuming it’s the perp in cuffs in the car. 2nd cop shoots and kills perp in car because he saw that’s what his partner was shooting at. When, in this hypothetical scenario, it was really a 3rd party that wasn’t identified yet, which would be the only plausible source of a gun shot anyway since the perp was already searched and cuffed.

That doesn’t make sense to me, but that’s how they’re trained. Ride or die with their comrads. Once the first shot is fired, it’s shoot first and ask questions later for all additional officers.

That’s not good policy. That’s not good for civilians.

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6 points

Essentially, you can’t think an acorn is a bullet and get away with shooting at a detained and secured civilian. But, if another officer on scene thinks, even unreasonably so, that an acorn is a bullet and starts shooting at a detained and secured civilian, you can too. If this doesn’t make a lot of sense to you, take that as reassurance that your critical thinking remains, at least partially, intact.

IIRC Sympathetic Fire seems to be insta-forgiveness (by other police and the courts) whenever it comes up.

As one example, I think it played a role in the Daniel Shaver case, but it’s been a long time since I read all those details and I really don’t want to dive into that pool of anger and sadness again to verify.

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5 points

Keep in mind, this is Florida. It is perfectly legal to murder anybody if you can prove that you felt threatened.

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179 points

If a random loud bang from an acorn falling nearby is enough to get someone to behave like this, they really should not be walking around with a gun. This is completely insane and unhinged behavior.

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66 points
*

theres no reason for most officers to be lethally armed their entire shift.

they are trained the exact opposite; be afraid of everything and empty the clip. ask questions later.

this cop behaved as he was trained

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26 points

The good news is, the guy did resign. So I guess he agrees.

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27 points

Or he resigned to just join a police force one county over.

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14 points

Coming soon to a police department near you!

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8 points

or a school ‘safety officer’

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8 points
*

Fun fact: ‘police officer’ isn’t even in the top 10 most dangerous professions in the US. It’s solidly beat by things like garbage collector, delivery driver, maintenance worker, and pilot. None of those professions typically carry weapons on the job.

Lots of police officers were former bullies with an inferiority complex. Some are wusses who only feel powerful because they’re carrying a deadly weapon.

Another fun fact: police in several other western countries don’t carry deadly weapons and yet are able to do their jobs just fine.

American police are trained to think everything and everyone is against them, through programs like David Grossman’s Killology course. Weird how a program designed to teach recruits to kill without empathy would result in people killing without empathy.

Elsewhere, police are learning de-escalation tactics, but police in the US are learning escalation.

It’s absurd, and leads to scared, trigger-happy morons shooting at acorns.

e: missed a word

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6 points

What was he shooting at? This man just blindly ptied his gun at something or someone he couldnt see!

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14 points

He was shooting at the unarmed suspect cuffed and trapped in the back of the police car.

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2 points

Read the story.

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6 points

From the body cam footage it was quite a soft bang

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34 points

I want to stress that I am in no-way attempting to excuse this cop, nor am I suggesting that there is any reasonable way to confuse the sound of an acorn with the sound of a gunshot. Even if there were, there is no justification for blindly “returning fire” in the general direction of the noise. That is so batshit crazy a scenario that it is completely irredeemable. This cop needs to be in prison.

That being said, I do want to comment on the capabilities of recording and playback. They completely lack the dynamic range necessary to make any sort of reasonable judgment on the intensity of the “bang”. What we hear in the video and what the officer heard in real life are two completely different things.

I have heard black walnuts (golf ball to tennis ball sized outer shell) hitting vehicles at close range. While they certainly can’t be reasonably confused with a gunshot, they are startlingly loud.

Again, I want to stress: completely unreasonable that an acorn hitting the cruiser could be confused for a gunshot, and criminally stupid to fire in the general direction of the noise.

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5 points

I appreciate your dedication to science (I’m still going to call you a nerd)

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4 points

Kinda sounds like PTSD or anxiety or something.

That doesn’t make it ok. Just ml saying police need more support and supervision.

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151 points

And yet the most surprising thing about the story is that the bodycam footage was released, smh

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69 points

Likely to protect the cop/department too, since he shot at his own car that already had a disarmed, detained suspect inside. He very nearly killed someone that was already a non-threat. If the body cam footage got out it might make people think their cops are negligent or improperly trained! /ghasp

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25 points

It’s like a business. If the liability rests with their officer and they are afraid of a lawsuit causing significant political blowback they are going to take action against the officer to minimize their liability. Hearing about an officer doing something like this and then leaving the force means there is nothing left for them to take action for.

If he didn’t resign, perhaps it would be slightly harder for the chief a town over to hire the guy, but since he resigned he may have minimal marks on his record.

I’d bet a thousand bucks this guy gets another job as a cop within 1yr though.

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6 points

I’d bet a thousand bucks this guy gets another job as a cop within 1yr though.

I’d bet a thousand bucks I know which video they’re going to be watching in the morning briefing on his first day.

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20 points

Of all the stupid that exists in Florida, they actually have pretty powerful open records laws.

It’s actually one of the reasons Florida has the “Florida Man” reputation. We know more about what’s happening there.

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13 points

More like that it was on in the first place.

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7 points

Not even close. The most surprising thing is that the cop resigned, by far.

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2 points

He resigned when he knew he was going to be fired. Probably easier to look for a job in another department before the dust settles.

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115 points

Obtaining a barber license means that you have completed a minimum of 1,250 hours of instruction in barbering education within a period of at least 9 months or completed 1,250 hours of training. It takes 1,250 to 2,000 hours to be a cosmologist. Police in Germany get 2.5 years of training, and in Finland, police education takes three years to complete. Police in the USA get 750 hours.

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31 points

USA intentionally dumbs down its people.

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9 points

Exactly. The PD will also reject applicants if they are too smart.

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3 points

When I first heard about it, I could not believe it. Fair enough there is shortages of police so they want recruitment process to hasten. But this is at the expense of public safety as there are too many trigger-happy police. Which is counter to “protect and serve” motto!

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23 points

Plus, it’s one of the few jobs that will disqualify you for being too smart.

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7 points

cosmologist

uh… this is why we didn’t approve of the word “cosmetology”. It takes more than 2000h to be a publishing cosmologist/astronomer.

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110 points

Our brave boys in blue, ladies and gentlemen.

There are 22 jobs in the U.S. statistically more dangerous than being a cop.

Cowards. So many of them are cowards.

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47 points

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6 points

You missed the most dangerous job: US president.

1/10 of all presidents have been assassinated and 1/5 of presidents died in office

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5 points
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Presidents Georg, who lives in white house & dies every day, is an outlier adn should not have been counted

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4 points

Might as well climb K2. 1/4 summit to death rate.

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-1 points

Are the numbers for warlord/dictator even worse?

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5 points

I’m so stealing this!

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2 points

Barbers have a more dangerous job. People are very particular about their hair, and can run out without paying.

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42 points
*

And the leading cause of injury/fatality for police officers by far: vehicle accidents. Not being shot at.

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28 points

Also COVID for a couple of years there as they refused to wear masks in most cases.

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21 points

Bullies are always cowards.

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15 points
*

That’s why they form a gang, because the only way they can feel strong is if they outnumber you.

That’s why it takes fifteen fucking cops to “deal with” a single homeless person in a public park who isn’t bothering anybody.

If they do that during the day, with enough people around, people will whip out their phones to record the cops and the cops will give up and leave and stop harassing.

If they do it during the evening, and there’s not very many people around, and only one person whips out their phone… The cops will arrest the person who whipped out their phone, too, because they outnumber them.

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18 points

Yep, and this is just tracking mortality. You would think, oh hey maybe they look better if you included things like workplace violence…nope. Pretty much 80% of work place violence happens to healthcare workers and social workers.

So pretty much every healthcare worker has experienced more violence in their work than police officers. I’ve had patients take swings at me in my hospital, it’s a fairly natural response to being in pain, on drugs, or disoriented. But just because your occupation has the potential to introduce you to a violent environment, that doesn’t justify your own participation in it.

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3 points

I’m a very nonviolent and nonconfrontational person, but I once had a boil in a sensitive spot lanced without adequate pain control, and it took all my self control to not FIGHT it. Stone cold sober, knowing it needed to be done, my body physically wanted to fight the doctor to make it stop. It’s nuts to expect someone who’s not completely there for whatever reason to be completely in control of that instinct, but it’s what cops expect people to do.

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1 point

Cops will taser or shoot you before you can take a swing at them. Healthcare workers and delivery drivers don’t get tasers and guns.

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11 points

Looking forward to my next traffic stop so I can mention that crossing guards have a more dangerous job than cops 🫡

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11 points
  1. Small engine mechanics
    Fatal injury rate: 15 per 100,000 workers
    Total deaths (2018): 8
    Salary: $37,840
    Most common fatal accidents: Transportation incidents, violence and other injuries by persons or animals

What the absolute fuck?

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4 points

Virtually every main cause of death on this list is falling or getting struck by a vehicle.

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4 points

Yes. A lot of them also involve being killed by the machines they use too. Safety measures can only go so far.

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4 points

Crossing guards being on a list with derrick operators and power linemen is a disturbing commentary on our road infrastructure priorities.

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