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AwakeNotWoke's avatar

Remember the Uvalde school shooting, how the police cowered in the hallway and let the kids get murdered. Those Uvalde police were far braver and more compassionate than the average American.

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Dr. Paul Alexander's avatar

I wrote that the Uvalde police were near scum, to allow the children to die.

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Diane Eddington's avatar

Cowards just collecting taxpayer dollars. DEI comes to mind... Also, in my opinion, men today are not the same as they once were defined. Normandy comes to mind... I am NOT knocking all men, because there are real men out there.

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Pnoldguy's avatar

How compassionate would you be while using hand sanitizer at the end of the hall while children were actively being murdered? If you think that is compassion I don't want to ever be around you.

Iirc, a sheriff rushed past them and subdued the shooter at much risk to his life.

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Bulwark's avatar

"Criminally Negligent Homicide occurs when someone causes the death of another person through actions that they failed to perceive as having a substantial and unjustifiable risk of death (NYPL 15.05 and 125.10). This is a class E felony."

(https://www.joeyjacksonlaw.com/criminal-defense/murder-and-manslaughter-charges/homicide/)

Under New York Penal Law ┬з 125.10, you could be prosecuted for criminally negligent homicide if with criminal negligence you kill another person. According to New York Penal Law ┬з 15.05(4), acting with "criminal negligence" means that you failed to perceive a substantial risk that your actions or INACTION would result in another person's death. The risk must constitute a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would observe under the circumstances.

(https://criminaldefense.1800nynylaw.com/new-york-penal-law-125-10-criminally-negligent-homicide.html)

"Negligence is an action or omission that is inconsistent with the course of action a prudent individual would take given the circumstances. Individuals whose negligent conduct results in injuries to others are liable for the damages."

(https://www.samndan.com/resources/new-york-negligence-laws/)

https://www.nycourts.gov/judges/cji/2-PenalLaw/125/125-10.pdf

The bystanders can be charged. If guilty according to the requirements must be proven, but this is the least the state/city can do. There was no gun or other immediate life-threating threats involved. I assume the fire was initially local on her clothing, even at a later stage you could have easily used your jacked to eliminate the oxygen input and with it estinguish the fire. I saw the perpetrator was intoxicated, I dont think all the bystanders were as well, even though it seem so...

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