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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
A SWAT Raid Based On Faulty Info Kills a Man Over His Huge Stash. Worth Maybe $2
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<blockquote data-quote="Glocktogo" data-source="post: 2692444" data-attributes="member: 1132"><p>Would you also like to prosecute doctors who make medical mistakes with murder? Psychiatrists who make mistakes with assisted suicide? </p><p></p><p>Certain high risk fields require some level of protection from criminal charges on obvious mistakes with no intent. Without it, we'd have no doctors, firefighters, paramedics, cops, etc. </p><p></p><p>I wholeheartedly agree with the civil liability and agencies frequently pay out on claims involving procedural errors. I also agree that in this case and similar ones, the raid supervisor/planner/investigator in charge of requesting the raid should have their QI rescinded. That would send the appropriate message to the people who actually make these bad decisions.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Glocktogo, post: 2692444, member: 1132"] Would you also like to prosecute doctors who make medical mistakes with murder? Psychiatrists who make mistakes with assisted suicide? Certain high risk fields require some level of protection from criminal charges on obvious mistakes with no intent. Without it, we'd have no doctors, firefighters, paramedics, cops, etc. I wholeheartedly agree with the civil liability and agencies frequently pay out on claims involving procedural errors. I also agree that in this case and similar ones, the raid supervisor/planner/investigator in charge of requesting the raid should have their QI rescinded. That would send the appropriate message to the people who actually make these bad decisions. [/QUOTE]
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The Water Cooler
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A SWAT Raid Based On Faulty Info Kills a Man Over His Huge Stash. Worth Maybe $2
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