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[return to "Breonna Taylor case: Louisville police nearly blank incident report"]
1. alkibi+dh[view] [source] 2020-06-11 06:05:28
>>evo_9+(OP)
and not a single shred of evidence it was racially motivated rather than an accident having to do with the fact that her boyfriend shot a police officer
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2. bilbo0+Ti[view] [source] 2020-06-11 06:23:06
>>alkibi+dh
Just, Devil's Advocate, but do you think the accident could have been the police kicking in the door of the wrong apartment? The boyfriend shooting at the police does not seem accidental, nor does it seem in any way wrong to my mind. If the officers had kicked in the door of the right apartment, the boyfriend would not have tried to take the officers out. Again, a completely appropriate and well reasoned response in my own opinion.

If you enter private property forcibly, you should expect to be shot at. If you shoot back while having forcibly gained illegal entry to private property, you've committed a crime. It seems fairly open and shut to me. The only hold up is police and court system corruption along with a healthy dose of good old fashioned racism. Again, just my opinion.

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3. alkibi+Bj1[view] [source] 2020-06-11 15:03:52
>>bilbo0+Ti
i agree with what you said. the entire ordeal was an accident on both sides but my question remained. is there a shred of evidence it was racially motivated since it’s getting lumped in with BLM
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4. bilbo0+lk1[view] [source] 2020-06-11 15:08:48
>>alkibi+Bj1
That's not what I said. The responsibility for the entire ordeal falls squarely, and solely, on the police. It was not "on both sides". It is not an accident, nor in any way inappropriate, for a man to defend his woman from illegal armed intruders. So the boyfriend made no mistakes at all, and committed no crimes.

You seem to be attempting to put forth a narrative that the boyfriend somehow made a mistake. Probably in some misguided attempt to support the police in this incident. But you're not helping the cause of LEO's right now. You're actually doing enormous harm to it. When you make mistakes you admit it, you hold people accountable, and then you fix the issues that lead to the mistake. That inspires confidence. The response of you and the Louisville PD and court system inspires not only lack of trust and lack of confidence, but also widespread animosity.

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