1) Ok we disagree, how was this guy not A POTENTIAL THREAT, people who assault police are the ones who moves slow to comply while they formulate an improvised attack, almost every time I've been assaulted it came out of a situation where some was hesitant to comply, it's recognized indicia of assaultive behaviour...why else wouldn't you immediately comply. I watched this video seven times...I really tried to see outside the context of my police brain, but I've arrested 1000 people in my career and this guy was moving slowly, much slower than the average 'ok you got me type'...he was arguing, and bracing himself...was he trying to debate with the other officer? The kick was neither very hard and certainly not battery (a US term)...there will be no injuries beyond 'trifling and transitional' and seriously, it appeared to be more like trying to get this drunken dimwit's attention. PS Do you have a strategy that we are aware of to get a drunk to comply, immediately? If you don't think immediately is important in a crowded market where having your back to his friends or giving him a moment to prepare an attack isn't important, I'll e-mail a few videos from our training films that show you officers being seriously hurt in these types of incident...like the mounties up north a few days ago who got beaten badly...
2) Awesome! All in favour, have been for years. In jurisdiction where they have it complaints against police drop significantly...some argue police behave better, police argue that when subject learns it actually was recorded, they don't risk exaggerating or worse creating false complaints. Problem is, they ARE expensive...we've asked for them but only recently did we even get a proper computer system in our cars.
One of our traffic guys started audio recording his traffic stops, and it's cleared him in 11 complaints and three people have been criminally charged with public mischief for fabricating a complaint, all three were convicted, not bad for 6 years...
3) I'm stunned at how many people in these forums are in awe of how awesome 11b is, but if the police use in a case that has dragged almost a decade, ruined careers, marriages, lives...we need a better system! Laughable. I agree that when PEOPLE break the law, people should face timely justice...justice should be the same for everyone...
I wholeheartedly agree in principal with what you've said, I think there's room in the Victoria case to hear and see all the evidence not a short video and rush off to say we have all the evidence...if I caught you going thru a red light on video, you still get to present evidence...I'll wait to see what the judge and jury of people (like yourself) say if charges are even laid.
Police image is terrible thing to repair and trust can be difficult to regain. There needs to be a fix...but these dozen or so a year cases divided by the 67,000 professional police in Canada (each officer involved in ~264 dispatched calls, not counting traffic stops which at 1 per day - very conservative estimate - equals roughly 475 public interactions per officer per year) 67,000 police X 475 interactions = 31,825,000 divided by the 24 for so serious complaints equals....uhh...my calculator can give me that percentage it's so low.
Sure officers are rude, so is the public...I'm not too worried about that...but we look at the messy use of force complaints, the criminal charges filed against police probably hit the paper once a month, maybe every two weeks...so 24 newsworthy stories per year?
My turn...
1) Always, always, always, always comply with the police, immediately. If you don't think you should be arrested, have that conversation once you've complied and been cuffed, police listen really well when you do too. I've often un-arrested people, but often it's to secure them while an investigation is conducted. I once broke up a fight, cuffed one guy, spoke to witnesses, then took the cuffs of the guy #1 and put them on guy #2. Best part is, people remained calm and we got to the investigation part. If you feel you are being wronged or your rights infringed...guess what, we have a system for that, it's called the courts and the police complaints system...resisting is NEVER the answer. Not once, not ever...
2) Put cameras in cruisers. It'll protect officers.
3) Show the police some respect. Yes you'll demand it in return and I assure you'll likely get it in return. Yes generation ME is all about respect, and rights and anti-establishment...we all know cut out mufflers are illegal...but people don't respect their neighbours and don't respect the law...of course you are going to draw police attention, the public (our bosses) command us to take action. In plain English, obey the law...don't be drunk and disorderly in public, don't assault your spouse or anyone else for that matter, don't steal and don't drive it like it's stolen...
4) Be polite with everyone you meet in life. If someone bumps into you, apologize first, it startles them, laugh about to yourself later... I'm a 5'11 245lbs, fit police officer, but I'm generally polite with the public and hear, wow I didn't expect you to be nice. I tell them their expectations get in the way of keeping an open mind.
I've never once, on two major police departments ever seen a polite, compliant person receive anything harsher than a suspicious look. Yes innocent people get arrested, yes tickets are handed out from time to time based on varying perceptions...what can we do about that? We already have a court system as a safety check...as Doug Llewelyn used to say on the People's Court, don't take the law into your own hands...