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Deputy Sobs After Shooting 70-Year-Old Who Grabbed Cane

Deputy Sobs After Shooting 70-Year-Old Who Grabbed Cane

You have to feel sad and bad for both. Watch the video.



Dramatic dash cam video shows a South Carolina traffic stop . In the video, a deputy opens fire on a 70-year-old Vietnam veteran after he mistakes the man's cane for a shotgun.

Vietnam veteran Bobby Canipe was driving back home to North Carolina from the Daytona 500 in Florida when he was pulled over by a deputy in York County, South Carolina for an expired license plate.

Canipe got out of the truck, not acknowledging the deputy, then reached for something in the back of his pickup truck.

Thinking Canipe was pulling a weapon from the truck's bed, the deputy yells out a warning to Canipe. "Hey sir. Sir, sir," says the deputy as Canipe pulls the cane out of the truck's bed, "Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!"

The deputy then opens fire, shooting six times and striking 70-year-old Canipe once in the stomach.

"Drop the gun!" yells the deputy. Canipe responds, "It's a walking stick."

Realizing his mistake, the distraught deputy rushes to assist the wounded man.

"I am so sorry," the deputy can be heard telling Canipe before other officers and EMTs arrive and he collapses into tears.

As a colleague attempts to calm the emotional deputy down, he sobs and asks, "Why'd he get out of the car?"


Canipe survived the wound, while the deputy, Terrence Knox, remains on administrative leave.


See the dramatic full video above.

https://foxnewsinsider.com/2014/03/...ng-after-shooting-70-year-old-veteran-who-was
 
Massimo said:
Another trigger happy cop.

Yes and no. Not an easy job to be a cop as you can see here that he does feel the pain but many times if you don't shoot first you die. Bad judgement on the officer but he is only human.
 
Massimo said:
Another trigger happy cop.

Head on over to Detroit and do a ride along on night shift for a week with the cops.

You will get a whole new outlook.

Of course they will run you before you go out.
 
papasmerf said:
Head on over to Detroit and do a ride along on night shift for a week with the cops.

You will get a whole new outlook.

Of course they will run you before you go out.

The USA should sell Detroit to Russia.
 
STAY IN YOUR VEHICLE! The driver was in the wrong! If he had 1/8 of a brain, he would have stayed in the vehicle knowing he required a walking stick! How was the cop to know the driver needed a walking stick and that could easily have been a sawed off shot-gun the driver was reaching for.

No charges with the exception of the expired tags should be laid.

People want to be stupid, act and plead stupid well you get what you deserve.
 
Stay in the car, the police is always a little nervous when they first approach your car.
 
Was this shooting justified?

Was this shooting justified?

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ALBUQUERQUE (KRQE) – Critics of the Albuquerque Police Department are about the fatal shooting of a homeless camper in the foothills, one even calling it murder. Meanwhile, the department says the shooting was justified.
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In the department’s since the shooting took place, APD did something they normally don’t do, of the incident.
[FONT=istok_webregular]Police say 38-year-old James M. Boyd is the man who was killed in the shooting last Sunday. So far, they’ve been unable to contact any of Boyd’s family members.
[FONT=istok_webregular]New Albuquerque Police chief Gorden Eden said Friday the video shows that the latest officer involved shooting is justified.
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Boyd was arguing with police for more three hours last Sunday in the foothills after officers went to talk to him about illegally camping in open space.
[FONT=istok_webregular]During Friday’s press conference, Chief Eden released video of the moment when officers first contacted Boyd. When one officer went to frisk Boyd, the homeless camper could then be heard refusing to comply, saying he was a government agent. The video shows Boyd continued to refuse officer commands and began threatening their lives.
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“I’m almost going to kill you right now. Don’t give me another directive. Don’t attempt to give me, the Department of Defense, another directive,” said Boyd at the beginning of the incident.
[FONT=istok_webregular]As the hours passed, Chief Eden said an APD Crisis Intervention Team officer and a State Police liaison were called to the scene. Both attempted to speak with Boyd, however, Chief Eden says Boyd continued to threaten officers with death. Police also discovered that Boyd had a violent 20-year criminal history that included multiple incidents of violence against officers.

Boyd’s history also showed years of mental health related concerns.
[FONT=istok_webregular]Video shows when officers moved in on Boyd around 7:30 p.m on the night of the shooting. At the beginning of incident, Boyd can be heard saying, “In a private world, if you were down at a bar or a bus stop, I would have the right to kill you right now because you’re trying to take me over. Don’t get stupid with me!”
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Video shows
Boyd then began grabbing bags and attempted to leave when officers started their use of non-lethal force.
[FONT=istok_webregular]As Boyd is moving, officers then threw a flash bang and released a K9 which appears to bite Boyd in the hand. Chief Eden said officers also used a taser gun and bean bag rounds. Two officers, Dominque Perez and Keith Sandy then both fired three bullets each from their department issued rifles, causing Boyd to fall to the ground.
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It’s unclear how many shots hit Boyd. APD says it is waiting on a report from the Office of the Medical Investigator to determine an exact cause of death.
[FONT=istok_webregular]However, the video is already raising some questions because of how Boyd appears to be turning away from the officers when bullets were fired.
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Chief Eden called the shooting justified at the news conference, saying officers used non-lethal force first and that there was a direct threat made at an unarmed K9 officer. According to Chief Eden, Boyd was less than eight feet from the unarmed canine officer.
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“Actually if you watch the video tape, all the less than lethal devices were in fact deployed. It was when the canine officer was down directing the canine dog that the suspect pulled out the two knives and directed a threat to the canine officer who had no weapons drawn. He was handling the dog,” Chief Eden said.
[FONT=istok_webregular]News 13 asked Chief Eden directly, “do you believe this was a justified shooting?”
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Chief Eden responded, “Yes, if you follow case law, ‘Garner versus Tennessee’, there was directed threat to an officer.”
[FONT=istok_webregular]In the video recording, officer Keith Sandy’s gun can be heard firing around the exact same second as a beanbag gun. Officer Dominque Perez can be seen firing his gun next, after several pops are heard.
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The press conference ended abruptly Friday without reporters being able to ask all of the questions they wanted. After taking questions for four minutes, an APD spokeswoman attempted to stop the press conference but Chief Eden took questions for two more minutes. After that, Chief Eden walked off, thanking reporters and saying “we’re good.”
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News 13 wanted to ask why officers didn’t try to use a taser on Boyd again before moving in and why they didn’t have shields.
[FONT=istok_webregular]APD says the two officers who fired shots remain on leave.
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One of the officers who was involved, in New Mexico law enforcement. APD hired Sandy in 2007 after he was fired by New Mexico State Police over the Wackenhut scandal. Sandy was accused of fraud for making money doing private security work while on the clock for State Police.
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When Sandy was hired by APD, the department said he would be a civilian employee and he wouldn’t have a gun or a badge. However, Sandy quickly rose through the department, landing on the ROPE Team, which goes after repeat offenders or some of the city’s most dangerous criminals.



 
Amateurs at it again. He wasn't a thread he turned around to get his stuff and walk away.

Another lost soul because of stupidity by those with guns.
 
sounds to me as if he was aware the situation had reached the point of comply or be shot.

he made the call
 
Damn if I see 5 officers aiming at me I drop it in a second. Why did he hold the knife for so long?.
 
Get a hold of this one.



This video showing cop tasering handcuffed girl helped clear 267-pound Trooper Daniel Cole of wrongdoing and have released this disturbing dash cam video that captured him tasing a 100 pound, 20 year old handcuffed girl in the back as she fled.
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement determined Trooper Daniel Cole's "use of force" was justified when he tased the woman last September at the FHP Pinellas Park Substation and cleared him of wrongdoing.

The fleeing woman, Danielle Maudsley, 20, suffered severe brain damage after hitting her head on the concrete and has been in a persistent vegetative state ever since.

The video shows Maudsley fleeing a back door of the substation with Cole following closely behind.

Maudsley was arrested for her alleged involvement in two hit-and-run crashes and driving without a license.

Cole brought Maudsley to the substation to complete his paperwork before taking her to the Pinellas County Jail, according to FHP reports.

As she enters the parking lot, Cole deploys his taser and Maudsley hits the ground hard, with her head slamming into the asphalt.

"What were you thinking? What are you, stupid?," Cole can be heard asking Maudsley on the video.
"I can't get up," said Maudsley.
"I don't want you to get up," said Cole.
"I can't get up," Maudsley said again. The last words Maudsley has spoken since being tasered.

On the video, Maudsley loses consciousness about two minutes after hitting her head.
Maudsley's mother said the trooper should have used other means to stop her daughter from fleeing.
"He was right behind her. He could've reached out," Maudsley said. "It was unnecessary."
The mother hired defense attorney Kevin Haylsett, who put FHP on notice for a lawsuit.

Hayslett said Cole violated FHP's taser policy which states:
"Fleeing cannot be the sole reason for the deployment."
"When you shoot someone in the back, and they're running away, all that force -- as you saw when Danielle's head hit the concrete -- that's why they don't allow you to do that, because you can have horrible tragedies like this," Hayslett said.

With any rule, there is an exception.

An Office of Inspector General Investigation Unit report states: "Although the FHP policy on Electronic Control Devices states that a member should not use the device on a handcuffed prisoner, it also provides that there may be situations that conflict with this policy."

The report goes on to state: "In this situation, Maudsley ... removed one of her handcuffs while in the back of Cole's patrol car, and moved her handcuffs from behind her back, to in front of her body, as she attempted to flee the FHP Station. In addition, Maudsley was running towards US Highway 19 which is a high volume road."

According to the report, Maudsley had oxycodone and cocaine in her system at the time.

"The Florida Department of Law Enforcement conducted an independent review of the incident," FHP spokesperson Sgt. Steve Gaskins said. "Their investigation found that the trooper's actions were legal and within the scope of his duties."

"He would've been better off to use his nightstick on her than he would a taser," Hayslett said.

The attorney also pointed out that Maudsley only weighs about 100 pounds.

In the report, Cole said he chose to use the taser because he "felt she was more susceptible to being injured if he attempted to tackle her." Cole weighs approximately 267 pounds.

Hayslett called the dash cam video disturbing. "It's one of those videos -- when you see it and you watch her head hit the pavement -- that it's hard to get those images out of your head," he said.

Maudsley's mom said her daughter's prognosis is not good. She is likely to remain in a vegetative state.

Maudsley is now in a Ft. Lauderdale rehab center that specializes in severe brain injuries.

 
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