Dallas Police Officer Kills Her Neighbor in His Apartment, Saying She Mistook It for Her Own

A Dallas police officer fatally shot a neighbor inside the man’s apartment late Thursday night, claiming that she mistook his apartment for her own and believed he was an intruder, the police said.

After completing her shift on Thursday, the officer went to her apartment building across the street from the Dallas Police Department’s headquarters shortly before 10 p.m. But the officer, who was still in police uniform, did not go to her own unit and instead tried to enter the residence of a neighbor, Botham Shem Jean. She then shot him, the authorities said.

.. So getting this straight, you “accidentally” walk into someone else’s apt (how do you get in?) shoot them dead, realize then it wasn’t your apt, be like “oh my bad”? Y’all had identical furniture & family photos?

Chit Chat Live 4-2-18: Stephon Clark, Police Shootings, Roseanne Show, Laura Ingram, No DACA Deal plus more.

Join Diamond and Silk for the weekly “Chit Chat Live” program. Special guest, Brandon Tatum We’ll be discussing the latest news headlines, including the police shooting of Stephon Clark in Sacramento, CA. Chit Chat Live appears LIVE on the Diamond and Silk YouTube, Facebook and Twitter pages every Monday at 8pm Eastern.

The Police Shooting of Stephon Clark Is Deeply Problematic

Focusing on whether the shooting was lawful misses the larger point.

.. It’s one thing to be in hot pursuit of an armed robber or a known, violent felon. It’s one thing to approach a situation where you perceive that innocent lives are in imminent danger. It’s another thing entirely to deal with a person who, to that point, had broken windows, and no other civilian was perceived to be at risk.

.. What are the possibilities that the suspect hadn’t heard the commands at all? (There’s some evidence, from his grandmother, that he may have had earbuds in.)

.. Moreover, what is the background level of risk here? According to the City of Sacramento, it’s been almost 20 years since a cop was shot and killed in the line of duty.

.. Cops don’t have a law-of-armed-conflict problem — the constitutional standards and state statutes governing when a cop can be prosecuted are appropriate — they have a rules-of-engagement problem. Training and escalation-of-force standards are too often not matched to the level of threat that police officers actually face or to the overarching mission of an American police force.

 

The Philando Castile Verdict Was a Miscarriage of Justice

Yes, the evidence indicates that Yanez was afraid for his life. He thought he might have been dealing with a robber (a fact he apparently didn’t tell Castile), and he testified that he smelled marijuana. But Castile was following Yanez’s commands, and It’s simply false that the mere presence of a gun makes the encounter more dangerous for the police. It all depends on who possesses the gun. If he’s a concealed-carry permit-holder, then he’s in one of the most law-abiding demographics in America. 

.. In recent months we’ve seen a number of cases where courts have excused police for shooting citizens even after the police made mistakes — and the citizens were doing nothing wrong — simply because these citizens were exercising their Second Amendment rights. This is unacceptable, and it represents the most extreme possible deprivation of civil rights and civil liberties.

.. I’m aware of no evidence that Yanez panicked because Castile was black. But whether he panicked because of race, simply because of the gun, or because of both, he still panicked, and he should have been held accountable. The jury’s verdict was a miscarriage of justice.