thomas pendrake
Active Member
In the last few months there have been at least two well publicized deaths resulting from dangerous take-down techniques being used by police officers, in both cases for minor infractions. The case of Eric Garner involved what I was taught in the Army as a killing technique, the rear stranglehold take-down (forbidden in NYC as a "choke hold"), and the latest in Baltimore, the case of Freddy Gray. Controversy about when Freddie's neck was broken has suggested that the problem may have resulted from no seat-belt during a "rough ride" around the city, but video of the original arrest shows him being slammed to the ground, his neck twisted to one side, and an officer heavily placing his knee to the back of his neck. When he was then carried to the van, his legs were hanging limply, suggesting that his neck was already broken at that point.
The point is that there seems to be a serious danger of injury with the current man-handling of civilians that is often used in arresting people, often when there is no serious resistance. What can be done to improve the handling of civilians ? How many deaths are acceptable?
The point is that there seems to be a serious danger of injury with the current man-handling of civilians that is often used in arresting people, often when there is no serious resistance. What can be done to improve the handling of civilians ? How many deaths are acceptable?