It says "fatal shootings" not "shootings" so apparently our LEOs are just better shots.
Copy and paste job?Great copy-and-paste job. Alternatively, our LEOs shoot just as well (or as poorly) as anybody else, they just do it more often. Absent evidence, you (and the original commenter on the story) are just speculating.
Not to worry, though; I'm sure R "Dogbreath" J will be along shortly to tell us we're all wrong, the police only shoot perfectly guilty people, and anybody who questions that has a psychological hang-up about authority.
Nice edit job.Great copy-and-paste job. Alternatively, our LEOs shoot just as well (or as poorly) as anybody else, they just do it more often. Absent evidence, you (and the original commenter on the story) are just speculating.
Not to worry, though; I'm sure R "Dogbreath" J will be along shortly to tell us we're all wrong, the police only shoot perfectly guilty people, and anybody who questions that has a psychological hang-up about authority.
View attachment 48339
The article cites a lack of standardized statewide training as a reason for this high rate. The Robert Yates incident was the exception not the rule. And also, isn't that what CLEET is? Isn't it standardized statewide training?
Enter your email address to join: