Detective work from “The Times”;
and here we go!
The police’s incident
report contained multiple errors. It listed Ms. Taylor’s
injuries as “none,” even though she had been shot several times, and indicated
that officers had not forced their way into the apartment — though they used a
battering ram to break the door open.
Ms. Taylor’s
family also said it was outrageous that the police felt it necessary to conduct
the raid in the middle of the night. Their lawyers say the police had already located the main
suspect in the investigation by the time they burst into the
apartment. But they “then proceeded to spray gunfire into the residence with a
total disregard for the value of human life,” according to a wrongful-death
lawsuit filed by Ms. Taylor’s mother.
There was no body camera footage from
the raid. And, for now, prosecutors have said they had
dismissed the charges against Mr. Walker, adding that they
would let investigations into the killing run their course before making any
final decisions. Some legal experts said the fact that prosecutors dropped charges
after a grand jury indictment suggested that they may have doubts about the
version of events told by the police.
Is a police report liar
called “errors”? a question that needs
an answer. What is yours?
The
police’s incident
report contained multiple errors.
Unwritten
rule of thumbs when some one is killed by a police officer in and not telling or
mentioning some one was killed in their investigation yet they are at large knowing
that it was a black skin person: call it errors.
No comments:
Post a Comment